1987 in spaceflight
The following is an outline of 1987 in spaceflight.
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Orbital launches | |
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First | 5 January |
Last | 29 December |
Total | 115 |
Catalogued | 110 |
National firsts | |
Space traveller | ![]() |
Rockets | |
Maiden flights | ASLV Energia |
Retirements | Atlas H N-II Titan III(34)B |
Crewed flights | |
Orbital | 3 |
Total travellers | 8 |
Launches
Date and time (UTC) | Rocket | Flight number | Launch site | LSP | ||
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Payload (⚀ = CubeSat) |
Operator | Orbit | Function | Decay (UTC) | Outcome | |
Remarks | ||||||
5 February 21:38:16 |
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Low Earth (Mir) | Mir EO-2 | 30 July 01:04:12 | Successful | ||
Crewed flight launching two cosmonauts and landing three, first crewed flight of Soyuz-TM | ||||||
12 February 06:40 |
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U.S. Air Force | Molniya | Communications | In orbit | Successful | |
Final flight of the Titan IIIB rocket. Final use of the RM-81 Agena upper stage in any rocket. | ||||||
26 February 23:05 |
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NOAA | Geostationary | Weather | In orbit | Operational | |
20 March 23:05 |
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PT Pasifik Satelit Nusantara | ? | Communications | In orbit | Successful | |
31 March 00:16:16 |
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1991–2001: Roskosmos | Low Earth (Mir) | Mir module | 23 March 2001 05:59:36 | Successful | |
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Low Earth (Kvant-1) | Space tug | 25 August 1988 | Successful | ||
15 May 17:30:01 |
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Intended: Low Earth | Weapons tests Technology | 15 May | Launch failure | ||
Maiden flight of Energia, computer error resulted in spacecraft attempting to perform circularisation burn in a retrograde orientation, failed to orbit | ||||||
8 June | ![]() |
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ISRO | Suborbital | Engineering test | 8 June | Successful | |
First flight of the RH-300 Mk II, reached an altitude of 130 km (80 miles) | ||||||
22 July 01:59:17 |
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Low Earth (Mir) | Mir EP-1 | 29 December 09:16:15 | Successful | ||
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts, first Syrian in space, carried replacement for ill EO-2 crewmember | ||||||
21 November 02:19:00 |
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Deutsche Bundespost | Current: Graveyard Operational: Geosynchronous |
Communications | In orbit | Spacecraft failure | |
Immediately after launch, one of its solar panels failed to deploy, and as a result of this the main uplink antenna, which was located behind the solar panel, could not deploy either. Briefly used to verify the systems of the Spacebus 300 satellite bus before being retired to a graveyard orbit. | ||||||
21 December 11:18:03 |
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Low Earth (Mir) | Mir EO-3 | 17 June 1988 10:12:32 | Successful | ||
Crewed flight with three cosmonauts | ||||||
Deep-space rendezvous
There were no deep-space rendezvous in 1987.
gollark: That's probably one of them. I'm writing.
gollark: > If you oppose compromises to privacy on the grounds that you could do something that is misidentified as a crime, being more transparent does helpI mean, sure. But I worry about lacking privacy for reasons other than "maybe the government will use partial data or something and accidentally think I'm doing crimes".
gollark: Also, you can probably just treat privacy as a "terminal goal" like all the other weird drives us foolish humans have, but I think there are good reasons for it based on other stuff.
gollark: Are you missing some negatives or something? I'm failing to parse that.
gollark: I don't understand what you're saying.
References
Generic references:

Spaceflight portal

- Bergin, Chris. "NASASpaceFlight.com".
- Clark, Stephen. "Spaceflight Now".
- Kelso, T.S. "Satellite Catalog (SATCAT)". CelesTrak.
- Krebs, Gunter. "Chronology of Space Launches".
- Kyle, Ed. "Space Launch Report".
- McDowell, Jonathan. "Jonathan's Space Report".
- Pietrobon, Steven. "Steven Pietrobon's Space Archive".
- Wade, Mark. "Encyclopedia Astronautica".
- Webb, Brian. "Southwest Space Archive".
- Zak, Anatoly. "Russian Space Web".
- "ISS Calendar". Spaceflight 101.
- "NSSDCA Master Catalog". NASA Space Science Data Coordinated Archive. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center.
- "Space Calendar". NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
- "Space Information Center". JAXA.
- "Хроника освоения космоса" [Chronicle of space exploration]. CosmoWorld (in Russian).
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