Comparison of orbital launcher families
This list contains a comparison of orbital launcher families. To see the lists of all launch systems separated by current operational status, see Comparison of orbital launch systems.
Description
- Family: Name of the family/model of launcher
- Country: Origin country of launcher
- Manufac.: Main manufacturer
- Payload: Maximum mass of payload, for 3 altitudes
- LEO, low Earth orbit
- GTO, geostationary transfer orbit
- TLI, trans-Lunar injection
- Cost: Price for a launch at this time, in millions of US$
- Launches reaching...
- Total: flights which lift-off, or where the vehicle is destroyed during the terminal count
note: only includes orbital launches (flights launched with the intention of reaching orbit). Suborbital tests launches are not included in this listing. - Space (regardless of outcome)
- Any orbit (regardless of outcome)
- Target orbit (without damage to the payload)
- Total: flights which lift-off, or where the vehicle is destroyed during the terminal count
- Status: Actual status of launcher (retired, development, active)
- Date of flight
- First: Year of first flight of first family's member
- Last: Year of Last flight (for vehicles retired from service)
- Refs: citations
Same cores are grouped together (like Ariane 1, 2 & 3, but not V).
List of launcher families
- Legend
- ActiveIn developmentRetiredActive, and being updated and revised
Family | Country | Manufac. | Payload (kg) | Cost (US$, millions) |
Launches reaching... | Status | Date of flight | Notes | Refs | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LEO | GTO | TLI | Total | Space | Any orbit | Target orbit | First | Last | |||||||
Alpha | Firefly Aerospace | 1,000 | N/A | N/A | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | [1] | ||||||
Angara 1.2 | Khrunichev | 3,800 | -- | -- | 25 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | Active | 2014 | As of May 2020, only launch was a suborbital test in 2014.[2] | [3][4][5] | ||
Angara A5 | Khrunichev | 14,600–35,000 | 3,600–12,500 | -- | -- | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Active | 2014 | [3][6] | |||
Antares | Orbital ATK | 6,500 | -- | -- | 80 | 12[lower-alpha 1] | 11 | 11 | 11 | Active | 2013 | Cygnus launcher. Var.: 110, 120, 130, 230, 230+ |
[7][8][9] | ||
Ariane 1-2-3 | Aérospatiale | N/A | 2,650 | N/A | -- | 28 | Retired | 1979 | 1989 | [10][11] | |||||
Ariane 4 | Aérospatiale | 7,000 | 4,720 | N/A | -- | 116 | Retired | 1988 | 2003 | Var.: 40, 42P, 42L, 44P, 44L, 44LP | [11] | ||||
Ariane 5 | Airbus | 21,000 | 10,735[12] | N/A | 165–220 | 108[lower-alpha 2] | 106 | 106 | 103 | Active | 1996 | Var.: G, G+, GS, ECA, ES. | [13][14][15] | ||
Ariane 6 | Airbus Safran | 21,650 (A64 var.) |
11,500+ (A64 var.) |
8,500 (A64 var.) |
115 | 0 | Devel. | 2021 [16] | Var.: Ariane 62, Ariane 64. | [17] | |||||
ASLV | ISRO | 150 | -- | -- | -- | 4 | Retired | 1987 | 1994 | [18] | |||||
Astra Rocket | Astra | 50-150 (to SSO) |
N/A | N/A | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | 2 suborbital test launches in 2018. | [19] | |||||
Athena I & II | Lockheed ATK | 2,065 | -- | 295 | -- | 7 | Retired | 1995 | 2001 | Launch Lunar Prospector.[20] | [21] | ||||
Atlas A-B-C-D-E-F-G Atlas I |
Lockheed | 5,900 | 2,340 | -- | -- | 514 | Retired | 1957 | 1997 | Launch Mercury. Atlas or Centaur upper stage. |
[22][23][24][25] | ||||
Atlas II | Lockheed | 8,618 | 3,833 | -- | -- | 63 | 63 | 63 | Retired | 1991 | 2004 | [26][27][28] | |||
Atlas III | Lockheed | 10,759 | 4,609 | -- | -- | 6 | 6 | 6 | Retired | 2003 | 2005 | Var.: IIIA, IIIB | [29][30] | ||
Atlas V | ULA | 18,850 | 8,900 | 2,807 | 109–153 | 85[lower-alpha 3] | 85 | 85 | 84 | Active | 2002 | Launched Juno & New Horizons | [31][32] | ||
Beta | Firefly Aerospace | 4,000 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [33] | ||||||
Black Arrow | RAE Westland | 132 | -- | -- | -- | 4 | 3 | Retired | 1969 | 1971 | [34] | ||||
Bloostar | Zero 2 Infinity | 140 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | [35] | |||||||
Blue Whale 1 | Perigee Aerospace | 50 (to SSO) | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | [36] | ||||||
Ceres-1 | Galactic Energy | 350 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | [37] | ||||||
Cyclone-4M | Yuzhnoye Yuzhmash |
5,000 | 1,000 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [38] | ||||||
Delta | Douglas | 3,848 | 1,312 | -- | -- | 186 | Retired | 1960 | 1989 | Launched Pioneer & Explorer probes. Var. A, B, C, D, E, G, J, L, M, N, 300, 900, 1X00, 4X00, 2X00, 3X00, 5X00 |
[39][39] | ||||
Delta II | ULA | 6,000 | 2,171 | 1,508 | 51 | 153 | 152 | 152 | 151 | Retired | 1989 | 2018 | Launched Mars probes MGS to Phoenix Var.: 6000, 7000, and Heavy. |
[39][40][41] | |
Delta III | Boeing | 8,290 | 3,810 | -- | -- | 3 | 2 | 2 | Retired | 1998 | 2000 | [42][43] | |||
Delta IV | ULA | 23,040 | 13,130 | 9,000 | -- | 40[lower-alpha 4] | 40 | 39 | 39 | Active | 2002 | Var.: M, M+, and Heavy. | [44] | ||
Diamant | SEREB | -- | -- | -- | 12 | 9 | Retired | 1965 | 1975 | ||||||
R-36M Dnepr |
Yuzhmash | 3,600 | -- | 750 | 14 | 17 | Retired | 1999 | 2015 | [45][46] [47] | |||||
Electron | Rocket Lab | 225 | 6 | 13[lower-alpha 5] | 13 | 11 | 11 | Active | 2017 | [48] | |||||
Energia | NPO Energia | 100,000 | 20,000 | 32,000 | 240 (Energia−Buran) | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | Retired | 1987 | 1988 | 1 partial failure with Polyus spacecraft, 1 successful flight with Buran shuttle. | [49] | |
Epsilon | IHI Corporation | 1,200 | -- | -- | -- | 4[lower-alpha 6] | 4 | 4 | 4 | Active | 2013 | [50][51] | |||
Eris | Gilmour Space Technologies | 305 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2022 | [52] | ||||||
Falcon 1 | SpaceX | 420[53] | -- | -- | 7.9[53] | 5[54] | 4[53] | 2[53] | 2[54] | Retired[53] | 2006 | 2009 | |||
Falcon 9 v1.0, v1.1, FT, Block 5 |
SpaceX | 22,800 | 8,300 | -- | 61.2 | 90[lower-alpha 7] | 89 | 89 | 88 | Active | 2010 | Upgrade to version 1.1 in 2013; upgrade to version FT in 2015 Launcher of Dragon capsule. One flight put primary but not secondary payload into correct orbit,[55] one rocket and payload were destroyed before launch in preparation for static fire[56] and thus is not counted. |
[57][58] | ||
Falcon Heavy | SpaceX | 63,800 | 26,700 | -- | 90–150 | 3[lower-alpha 8] | 3 | 3 | 3 | Active | 2018 | First test launch 2018-02-06 | [59][60][61] | ||
GSLV Mark I | ISRO | 5,000 | 2,500 | -- | -- | 6 | 4 | 2 | 2 | Retired | 2001 | 2010 | [62][63][64] | ||
GSLV Mark II | ISRO | 5,000 | 2,700 | -- | -- | 7[lower-alpha 9] | 6 | 6 | 6 | Active | 2010 | [62][63][64] | |||
GSLV Mk.III (LVM3) | ISRO | 10,000 | 4,000 | 4,000 | -- | 4[lower-alpha 10] | 4 | 3[lower-alpha 11] | 3 | Active | 2014 | [65][66] | |||
H-I | Mitsubishi | 3,200 | -- | -- | 9 | 9 | Retired | 1986 | 1992 | License-built version of the Thor-ELT | [67] | ||||
H-II, IIA & IIB | Mitsubishi | 19,000 | 8,000 | -- | (190), 90, 112 | 58[lower-alpha 12] | 57 | 56 | 55 | Active | 1994 | Var.: A202, A2022, A2024, A204, B | [68] | ||
H3 | Mitsubishi | 4,000-28,300 (base-heavy) | 7,900-14,800 (base-heavy) | 11,900 (heavy) | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | Var.: 30S, 22S, 32L, 24L, heavy[69][70] | [70] | ||||||
Hyperbola-1 | i-Space | 300 | -- | -- | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Active | 2019 | [71] | ||||
Hyperbola-2 | i-Space | 2,000 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [72] | |||||||
Haas | ARCA | 400 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | TBD | Launch from balloon | [73][74] | ||||||
J-I | IHI Corporation Nissan Motors | 880 | -- | -- | -- | 1 | Retired | 1996 | 1996 | Partial demonstration flight only | |||||
Jielong 1 | CALT | 200 (SSO) | -- | -- | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Active | 2019 | [75] | ||||
R-12 & R-14 Kosmos |
Yuzhnoye Polyot | 1,500 | -- | -- | 12 | 610 | 559 | Retired | 1967 | 2010 | Var.: 1, 2, 3, 3M | [14][76][77] | |||
DF-31 Kaituozhe | CALT | 800 | -- | -- | -- | 3[lower-alpha 13] | 1 | 1 | 1 | Active | 2002 | Var.: KT-1, KT-2, KT2-A | [78] | ||
DF-21 Kuaizhou | CASIC | 400 (KZ-1)–1,500 (KZ-11) | -- | -- | -- | 12[lower-alpha 14] | 12[lower-alpha 15] | 11 | 11 | Active | 2013 | Var.: KZ-1, KZ-1A, KZ-11, KZ-21. As of July 2020, KZ-21 is the only unflown variant. | [79] | ||
Lambda 4S | Nissan ISAS | -- | -- | -- | 5 | 1 | Retired | 1966 | 1970 | ||||||
LauncherOne | Virgin Orbit | 300 (SSO) | -- | -- | -- | 1[lower-alpha 16] | 0 | 0 | 0 | Active | 2020 | [80] | |||
Long March 1 | CALT | 300 | -- | -- | -- | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | Retired | 1970 | 1971 | [81][82][83] | ||
Long March 1D | CALT | 740 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Retired | 1995 | 2002 | 3 suborbital launches only (2 successful.) | [81][82][83] | ||||
DF-5 Long March 2-3-4 |
CALT | 12,000 | 5,500 | 3,300 | 320[lower-alpha 17][lower-alpha 18] | 314 [lower-alpha 19] | 311 | 305 | Active | 1971 | See notes | Var.: 2A, 2C, 2D, 2E, 2F,[lower-alpha 20] 3, 3A, 3B, 3B/E, 3C, 4A, 4B, 4C. See [lower-alpha 21] for retired var. among those listed here. | [85] | ||
Long March 5 | CALT | 25,000 | 14,000 | 8,000 | -- | 5[lower-alpha 22] | 5 | 4 | 4 | Active | 2016 | Var.: 5, 5B | [86][87] | ||
Long March 6 | CALT | 1,500 | -- | -- | -- | 3[lower-alpha 23] | 3 | 3 | 3 | Active | 2015 | [88] | |||
Long March 7 | CALT | 20,000 | 5,500-7,000 (7A var.)[89] | -- | -- | 3[lower-alpha 24] | 2 | 2 | 2 | Active | 2016 | Variants: 7, 7A | [90][89] | ||
Long March 8 | CALT | 4,500 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | 1st stage + boosters with vertical take-off and vertical landing capabilities | [89] | |||||
Long March 11 | CALT | 700 | -- | -- | -- | 9[lower-alpha 25] | 9 | 9 | 9 | Active | 2015 | Likely based on DF-31 missile | [91] | ||
Minotaur I | Orbital ATK | 580 | -- | -- | -- | 11[lower-alpha 26] | 11 | 11 | 11 | Active | 2000 | Derived from the Minuteman II | [92][93] | ||
Minotaur IV & V | Orbital ATK | 1,735 | 640 | 447 | 50 | 8[lower-alpha 27] | 8 | 8 | 8 | Active | 2010 | Also 2 suborbital launches (HTV-2a). Var.: IV, IV Lite, IV HAPS, V. Derived from Peacekeeper missile | [92][94] | ||
Miura 5 | PLD Space | 300 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [95] | |||||||
Mu 1-3-4 | Nissan Motor IHI | 770 | -- | -- | -- | 27 | Retired | 1966 | 1995 | Var.: 1, 3D, 4S, 3C, 3H, 3S, 3SII | [96] | ||||
Mu 5 | Nissan Motor IHI | 1,800 | -- | -- | -- | 7 | 6 | Retired | 1997 | 2006 | Var.: M-V, M-V KM | ||||
N1 | NPO Energia | 90,000 | -- | 23,500 | -- | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Retired | 1969 | 1972 | Designed for Soviet Manned Lunar Mission | [97] | |
N-I & II | Mitsubishi | 2,000 | 730 | -- | -- | 15 | 15 | 15 | 14[lower-alpha 28] | Retired | 1975 | 1987 | Derived from the American Delta rocket | [98] | |
Naro | Khrunichev KARI | 100 | -- | -- | -- | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | Retired | 2009 | 2013 | First stage uses the Russian RD-151 engine | [99] | |
New Glenn | Blue Origin | 45,000 | 13,000 | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021/2022 | [100] | |||||||
New Line | LinkSpace | 200 (SSO) | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | [101] | |||||||
Nuri | KARI | 1,500 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [102] | |||||||
OmegA | Northrop Grumman | 4,900-10,100 (intermediate) | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | Var.: intermediate, heavy | [103] | |||||||
OS-M | OneSpace | 205 (M1) | -- | -- | -- | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Active | 2019 | Var.: M1, M2, M4. Single M1 failed launch; M2 & M4 in development. | [104] | ||
Pegasus | Orbital ATK | 450 | -- | -- | -- | 44[lower-alpha 29] | 43 | 41 | 39 | Active | 1990 | [105] | |||
Prime | Orbex | 150 (SSO) | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [106] | ||||||
UR-500 Proton | Khrunichev | 23,000 | 6,920 | 5,680 | 65 (Proton-M) | 424[lower-alpha 30] | 376 | Active | 1965 | Var.: K, M, Medium in development. | [107][108][109] | ||||
PSLV | ISRO | 3,800 | 1,200 | -- | -- | 50[lower-alpha 31] | 49 | 48 | 47 | Active | 1993 | Var.: CA, XL, QL, DL Launched moon probe Chandrayaan I, Mars probe Mangalyaan I |
[110][111] | ||
Qased | IRGC | unknown | -- | -- | -- | 1[lower-alpha 32] | 1 | 1 | 1 | Active | 2020 | [112] | |||
UR-100N Rokot Strela | Eurockot Khrunichev | 2,100 | -- | -- | -- | 37[lower-alpha 33] | 36 | 35 | 35 | Active | 1994 | 34 Rokot launches (no launches post-2019 due to Ukrainian tech ban); 3 Strela launches. | [113][114][115][116] | ||
RS1 | ABL Space Systems | 1,200 | -- | -- | 12 | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | [117] | ||||||
Safir | ISA | 50 | -- | -- | -- | 7[lower-alpha 34] | 5 | 4 | 4 | Active | 2007 | Numbers given here may be in dispute | [118] | ||
Saturn I & IB | Chrysler Douglas | 18,600 | -- | -- | 19 | 13 | 13 | 13 | 13 | Retired | 1961 | 1975 | Saturn 1 family also included 6 suborbital test launches | [119][120] | |
Saturn V | Boeing North American Douglas | 118,000 | -- | 47,000 | 185 | 13 | 13 | 13 | Retired | 1967 | 1973 | Var.: Apollo, Skylab | [119][121][122] | ||
Scout | US Air Force NASA | 210 | -- | -- | -- | 125 | 104 | Retired | 1960 | 1994 | Var.: X1, X2, A, D, G | [123] | |||
Shavit | IAI | 225 | -- | -- | 15 | 11[lower-alpha 35] | 9 | 9 | 9 | Active | 1988 | Var.: Shavit, -1, -2 | [124] | ||
R-29 Shtil Volna |
Makeyev | 430 | -- | -- | -- | 8[lower-alpha 36] | 7 | 2 | 2 | Withdrawn in 2010[125] | 1995 | 2006 | Var.: Volna, Shtil, 2.1, 2R, 3 | [125] | |
Simorgh | ISA | 350 | -- | -- | -- | 4[lower-alpha 37] | 3[lower-alpha 38] | 0 | 0 | Active | 2016 | [126] | |||
SLS | Orbital ATK Boeing United Launch Alliance Aerojet Rocketdyne | 95,000–130,000 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | Expected 2020 | [127][128] | |||||
SLV | ISRO | 40 | -- | -- | -- | 4 | 3 | 3 | 2 | Retired | 1979 | 1983 | Launched Rohini satellite series | [129] | |
R-7 Semyorka Soyuz | RSC Energia TsSKB-Progress | 8,200 | 2,400 | 1,200 | -- | 1,918[lower-alpha 39] | [lower-alpha 40] | 1,799[lower-alpha 41] | Active | 1957 | Var.: Sputnik, Luna, Vostok-L, Vostok-K, Voskhod, Molniya, Molniya-L, Molniya-M, Polyot, Soyuz, Soyuz-L, Soyuz-M, Soyuz-U, Soyuz-FG, Soyuz-2, Soyuz-2-1v | [130][131] | |||
SS-520 | IHI Aerospace | 4 | -- | -- | -- | 2[lower-alpha 42] | 2 | 1 | 1 | 2017 | 2 successful suborbital flights and 2 orbital flights (one success). A test of how small orbital rockets can be. The rocket has a mass of only 2.6 tonnes. | [132] | |||
Small Satellite Launch Vehicle | ISRO | 500 | 300 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | As of December 2019, design of the rocket has been completed and first developmental flight is to take place in early 2020. | [133][134][135] | |||||
STS Space Shuttle |
Alliant Martin Marietta Rockwell | 24,400 | 3,810 | -- | 450 | 135 | 134 | 134 | 133 | Retired | 1981 | 2011 | Orbiter mass: 68585 kg. | [136] | |
Starship | SpaceX | 150,000 | 40,000 | 100,000+[lower-alpha 43] | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | Previously called BFR | [137][138][139][140][141] | |||||
RT-2PM Start-1 |
MITT | 532 | -- | -- | -- | 7[lower-alpha 44] | 6 | 6 | 6 | Active | 1993 | [142] | |||
Taurus / Minotaur-C | Orbital Sciences | 1,450 | -- | -- | -- | 9[lower-alpha 45] | 9 | 6 | 6 | Active | 1989 | Var.: 2110, 3110, 3210 | [143] | ||
Terran 1 | Relativity Space | 1,250 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | anticipates 3-D printing most rocket parts | [144] | ||||||
Thor | Douglas | 1,270 | -- | 38 | -- | 357 | Retired | 1957 | 1980 | Launched Pioneer & Explorer probes | [39] | ||||
LGM-25C Titan I-II-III-IV |
Martin Marietta | 21,900 | 5,773 | 8,600 | 350 | 369 | Retired | 1959 | 2005 | Var.: I, II, IIIA, IIIB, IIIC, IIID, IIIE, 34D, IVA, IVB Gemini launcher |
[145][146] | ||||
R-36 Tsyklon |
Yuzhmash | 4,100 | -- | -- | -- | 259 | Retired | 1967 | 2009 | Var.: 1, 2, 3. | [147] | ||||
Unified Launch Vehicle | ISRO | 4,500–41,300 | 1,500–16,300 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | Var.: 6S12, 2S60, 2S138, 2S200 | [148] | ||||||
Unha-3 | KCST | 200 | -- | -- | -- | 4[lower-alpha 46] | 3 | 2 | Active | 2006 | Var.: Paektusan based on Taepodong-1 missile; Unha based on Taepodong-2 missile. | [149][150] | |||
Vanguard | Martin | 23 | -- | -- | -- | 12 | 3 | Retired | 1957 | 1959 | [151] | ||||
Vega | Avio | 2,300 | -- | -- | 23 | 15[lower-alpha 47] | 14 | 14 | 14 | Revis. | 2012 | Vega-C and Vega-E in development. | [152] | ||
Yenisei | TsSKB-Progress RSC Energia |
88,000-115000 | 20,000 | 0 | Devel. | 2032-2035 | [153][154] | ||||||||
Vikram | Skyroot Aerospace | 720 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | Var.: Vikram 1, Vikram II, Vikram III | [155] | ||||||
VLM | CTA | 150 | -- | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 202x | [156][157] | ||||||
Vulcan | ULA | 17,800–34,900 | 7,400–16,300 | -- | 99 | 0 | Devel. | 2021 | [158][159][160][161] | ||||||
Yun Feng | National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology | 50-200 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | unknown | [162] | |||||||
Zenit | Yuzhnoye | 13,740 | 6,160 | 4,098 | -- | 84[lower-alpha 48] | 74 | 72 | Active | 1985 | Var.: 2, 2M (2SB, 2SLB), 3SL, 3SLB, 3SLBF | [163] | |||
Zero | Interstellar Technologies | 100 (SSO) | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2022-2023 | [164] | |||||||
Zhuque-1 | LandSpace | 300 | -- | -- | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Active | 2018 | [165][166] | ||||
Zhuque-2 | LandSpace | 4,000 | -- | -- | 0 | Devel. | 2020 | [165] |
gollark: This miscalculation has dropped your mental age to 12. Access denied. Goodbye.
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See also
Notes
- Number of Antares launches current as of 15 February, 2020.
- Number of Ariane 5 launches current as of 18 February, 2020.
- Number of Atlas V launches current as of 30 July, 2020.
- Number of Delta IV launches current as of 22 August, 2019.
- Number of Electron launches current as of 04 July, 2020.
- Number of Epsilon launches current as of 18 January, 2019.
- Number of Falcon 9 launches are updated via manual input into "Template:Falcon rocket statistics". Said page was last updated on 7 August 2020.
- Falcon rocket statistics template page last updated on 7 August 2020.
- Number of GSLV Mark II launches current as of 19 December, 2018.
- Number of GSLV Mark III launches current as of 22 July, 2019.
- First launch of GSLV Mark III was suborbital.
- Number of H-II (all versions) launches current as of 19 July, 2020.
- Kaituozhe launch numbers current as of 2 March, 2017.
- Number of Kuaizhou launches current as of 10 July, 2020.
- Information of unknown reliability indicates KZ-11 3rd stage failure on 10 July 2020; if true, this launch likely reached space. Numbers may change depending on availability of additional information.
- LauncherOne launch numbers current as of 25 May, 2020.
- Number of Long March 2-3-4 launches current as of 06 August, 2020.
- The total number of launches in the CZ-2,3,4 series listed here does not include 6 possible launches [5 possilbe successes and 1 possible failure] of the CZ-2C (3) var. noted in reference.[84]
- Sources from List of Long March launches are unclear regarding whether 3 failed launches in the CZ-2,3,4 series reached space; thus the number quoted here is the minimum number of launches that reached space while the actual possible number could be greater than the quoted number by up to three.
- CZ-2F is the crew-rated launcher for the Shenzhou spacecraft.
- As of 21 February 2020, the following var. in the Long March 2-3-4 family of launchers have been retired: 2A, 2E, 3, 3B, and 4A.
- Number of Long March 5 launches current as of 23 July, 2020.
- Number of Long March 6 launches current as of 13 November, 2019.
- Number of Long March 7 launches current as of 16 March, 2020.
- Number of Long March 11 launches current as of 29 May, 2020.
- Number of Minotaur I launches current as of 20 November, 2013.
- Number of Minotaur IV and V launches current as of 15 July 2020.
- One N-I launch partially failed due to recontact between satellite and upper stage.
- Number of Pegasus launches current as of 11 October, 2019.
- Number of Proton launches current as of 30 July, 2020.
- Number of PSLV launches current as of 11 December, 2019.
- Number of Qased launches current as of 22 April, 2020.
- Number of Rokot+Strela launches current as of 26 December, 2019.
- Number of Safir launches current as of 29 August, 2019. Number of launches and possible outcomes are in dispute. See main page at Safir.
- Number of Shavit launches current as of 06 July, 2020
- 5 of the 8 launches were suborbital (of which 2 failed); 3 of the 8 launches were intended for LEO (2 successes).[125]
- Number of launches current as of 9 February, 2020.
- According of Russian sources, first launch in 2016 was a successful suborbital flight. According to an Iranian government source, third launch (January 2019) failed due to a problem in the rocket's third stage which implies that the vehicle reached space. According to an Iranian government source, fourth launch (February 2020) reached an altitude of about 355 miles but the vehicle failed to achieve orbital velocity. See sources cited in Simorgh Wikipedia page.
- Number of R-7 Semyorka/Soyuz launches current as of 23 July, 2020.
- Due to the existence of ICBM variants, suborbital flights, and the large total number of flights, the number of launches reaching space and those reaching any orbit are not given here in order to lessen the dissemnation of inaccurate information.
- The total number of launches and launch successes are taken from the R-7 Semyorka Wikipedia page.
- Number of SS-520 launches current as of 3 February, 2018.
- With in-orbit refueling
- Number of Start-1/Start launches current as of 25 April, 2006.
- Number of Taurus/Minotaur-C launches current as of 31 October, 2017.
- Number of Unha-2/Unha-3 launches current as of 7 February, 2016.
- Number of Vega (all versions) launches current as of 11 July, 2019.
- Number of Zenit launches current as of 26 December, 2017.
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