Portal:Spaceflight/Spaceflight news/2015 archive

The most recent items from the archive are transcluded into the news section to avoid the need to update multiple pages. When adding new items, place them at the top of the list, and move the onlyinclude tags so that no more than seven items are transcluded.
 * 27 December: NASA delays launch of the InSight lander to Mars until 2018 due to issues preparing experiments.
 * 22 December: SpaceX launches its first Falcon 9 v1.1 FT rocket. Its first stage successfully lands back at Landing Zone 1, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
 * 21 December: Russia launches Progress MS-1, the maiden flight of the updated Progress MS spacecraft, from Baikonur Cosmodrome to resupply the International Space Station.
 * 19 December: The European Space Agency announces that they have selected the Ariane 5 rocket to launch the James Webb Space Telescope, currently planned to launch in 2018.
 * 7 December: The Japanese Akatsuki space probe succeeds at its second attempt to enter orbit around Venus.
 * 6 December: The Cygnus resupply spacecraft returns to flight with the launch of Cygnus CRS OA-4 SS Deke Slayton 2 on an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
 * 5 December: New Horizons begins sending full-resolution photos from its encounter with the Pluto system.
 * 23 November: Blue Origin launches its suborbital rocket New Shepard beyond the Kármán line and successfully recovers both its crew capsule (by parachute) and booster stage (by parachute and propulsive landing.)
 * 4 November: The maiden flight of the SPARK rocket ends in failure with its first stage loses attitude control.
 * 20 October: The first launch by Russia from Vostochny Cosmodrome is further delayed to 2016.
 * 7 October: SpaceIL has booked the first launch to attempt completion of the Google Lunar X Prize, currently scheduled to launch in the second half of 2017 on a Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket.
 * 28 September: ISRO succeeds in launching Astrosat, its first indigenous astronomy satellite.
 * 19 September: The Chinese National Space Administration successfully conducts the maiden launch of the Long March 6 rocket.
 * 15 September: Cassini has discovered evidence that the subsurface ocean hypothesized to exist on Enceladus is likely global.
 * 15 September: Blue Origin announces that it has leased Launch Complex 36 at Spaceport Florida as the launch platform for its future orbital rockets.
 * 4 September: Boeing announces that its CCDev spacecraft will be named the "CST-100 Starliner".
 * 28 August: The New Horizons science team targets 2014 MU69 as a possible post-Pluto fly-by target for the probe, with a possible fly-by on January 1, 2019.
 * 25 August: NASA launches a study of potential orbiter missions to Uranus and/or Neptune.
 * 5 August: NASA reveals a series of photos taken by the Deep Space Climate Observatory showing a transit of Earth by the Moon.
 * 27 July: The National Air and Space Museum has raised the funds necessary to restore and scan Neil Armstrong's Apollo A7L spacesuit from Apollo 11.
 * 14 July: New Horizons makes its closest approach to Pluto.
 * 9 July: Christopher Cassidy succeeds Robert Behnken as Chief of the Astronaut Office at NASA.
 * 2 July: SpaceX announces that its in-flight launch escape system test for the Dragon V2 spacecraft will be launched from Kennedy Space Center Pad 39A, and will take place after its first orbital test flight.
 * 28 June: SpaceX CRS-7 is lost when the second stage of its Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket disintegrates prior to ignition.
 * 31 July: NASA publishes its first detailed and annotated maps of Pluto and Charon with provisional names of various geological features.
 * 24 July: NASA reveals that the ice on Tombaugh Regio consists of nitrogen and carbon monoxide, and is exhibiting signs of glacial flowing.
 * 15 July: NASA reveals the first close-up images of Pluto, exposing mountains up to 11,000 feet high, suggesting Pluto may currently be geologically active. Deep canyons are discovered on Charon.
 * 15 July: NASA receives its first post-fly-by contact from New Horizons on time, and begins receiving data from its surveys.
 * 13 July: NASA announces that New Horizons has discovered methane ice on Pluto, as well as nitrogen in its atmosphere.
 * 13 July: NASA announces that Pluto's estimated diameter has been increased to 2368 km, an increase of 66 km over recent estimates based on observations from New Horizons.
 * 11 July: New Horizons gets its best image of the hemisphere of Pluto that will be opposite the hemisphere to be imaged on the day of its closest fly-by, given the length of day on the dwarf planet.
 * 17 June: NASA announces its intention to lease High Bay 3 at the Vehicle Assembly Building, as well as its three Mobile Launcher Platforms.
 * 15 June: The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission spacecraft re-enters Earth's atmosphere and is destroyed over the Indian Ocean.
 * 13 June: The Philae lander finally re-activates on Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko after seven months with insufficient power.
 * 2 June: Launch of Jason-3 is delayed due to a contamination issue discovered at its manufacturing facility at Thales Alenia Space in France.
 * 28 May: NASA has awarded Boeing the first commercial contract to launch a crew to the International Space Station with the CST-100 spacecraft, provisional to certification under the Commercial Crew Development program.
 * 26 May: The Leonardo Permanent Multipurpose Module is relocated from the Unity nadir port to the Tranquility fore port on the International Space Station in preparation for installation of the NASA Docking System.
 * 26 May: SpaceX receives certification from the United States Air Force to launch military payloads with the Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket.
 * 16 May: The Mexican Mexsat-1 Centenario comsat is lost in a Proton-M launch failure.
 * 15 May: SpaceX receives Category 2 certification in NASA's Launch Services Program for the Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket, clearing the way for the Jason-3 launch in July 2015.
 * 13 May: Sarah Brightman withdraws from training for Soyuz TMA-18M for personal reasons. She has been replaced by fellow space tourist Satoshi Takamatsu.
 * 8 May: Progress M-27M re-enters over the South Pacific Ocean and burns up west of southern Chile following a launch anomaly that left it unusable.
 * 6 May: SpaceX conducts its first test of the SuperDraco engines on a Dragon V2 spacecraft in launch escape mode.
 * 30 April: The MESSENGER mission ends when the probe impacts Mercury.
 * 29 April: Progress M-27M declared a total loss as operations turn to an attempted deorbit between 5 May and 7 May.
 * 28 April: Progress M-27M is discovered to be tumbling in its initial parking orbit, with Roscosmos unable to control it, placing its mission to the International Space Station in jeopardy.
 * 27 April: Progress M-27M launches to the International Space Station, but communications issues delay docking until at least April 30.
 * 13 April: The United Launch Alliance unveils their next-generation Vulcan rocket.
 * 9 April: NASA and JAXA terminate the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission after 17 years, anticipating re-entry as early as June 2015.
 * 1 April: NASA announces it has contracted Ad Astra to complete development of its Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket engine.
 * 27 March: Soyuz TMA-16M is launched to the International Space Station carrying the Year in Space occupants of Mikhail Korniyenko and Scott Kelly.
 * 24 March: NASA has announced that the Opportunity rover has become the first spacecraft to cover the length of a marathon on the surface of a world other than Earth.
 * 20 March: NASA announces that Rosetta has discovered molecular nitrogen on Comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko.
 * 18 March: NASA selects the Delta IV Heavy rocket to launch Solar Probe Plus, targeting a launch date in 2018.
 * 7 March: NASA purchases three missions from SpaceX and one mission from Orbital ATK for the Commercial Resupply Service to the International Space Station in 2017.
 * 6 March: NASA's Dawn spacecraft enters orbit around dwarf planet Ceres.
 * 24 February: NASA and Roscosmos mutually agree to extend the International Space Station's mission through 2024.
 * 21 February: Aleksei Gubarev, Soviet cosmonaut and veteran of two space missions, passes away, aged 83.
 * 23 January: SpaceX has settled its lawsuit against the United States Air Force regarding the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle program and a DoD launch block-buy executed in 2013 with the United Launch Alliance.
 * 16 January: The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has located the Beagle 2 lander, having apparently landed safely at its intended target of Isidis Planitia despite losing contact with Earth on Christmas Day, 2003.