
Patrick Baudry, first African-born man and second Frenchman in space.Yuri Baturin, first Russian politician in space.Toktar Aubakirov, first Kazakh born person in space.Neil Armstrong (1930–2012), flew on Apollo 11 first person to walk on the Moon.Hayley Arceneaux, first in space with a Prosthesis.Anousheh Ansari, fourth spaceflight participant and first female spaceflight participant, first woman of Muslim descent in space, and first Iranian in space.(Claudie André-Deshays – see Claudie Haigneré).Anderson (1959–2003), died on February 1, 2003, in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster of STS-107 William Anders, first Asian-born person in space (born in Hong Kong, but an American citizen).Buzz Aldrin, flew on Apollo 11 second person to walk on the Moon.Sultan Salman Al Saud, first Saudi Arabian in space, only royal person in space, first Middle Eastern person in space.Toyohiro Akiyama, the first business-sponsored hi space traveler and the first Japanese person in space.Aidyn Aimbetov, first cosmonaut by KazCosmos-selection in space.A before a name denotes that the person is currently in space.A before a name denotes space travelers who have walked on the Moon.
A before a name denotes that the person died during spaceflight, or during an attempted spaceflight. National flags indicate the space traveler's citizenship at the time of flight(s). Names in italic are space travelers who have left low Earth orbit. This list does not include animals in space. Space travelers have spent over 29,000 person-days (or a cumulative total of over 77 years) in space including over 100 person-days of spacewalks. Of those 574, three people only reached a sub-orbital flight, 567 people reached Earth orbit, 24 traveled beyond low Earth orbit and 12 walked on the Moon. People who died training for space travel or died during missions that failed to reach the required altitude, such as Christa McAuliffe, can be found in the article on space disasters.Īs of July 20, 2021, a total of 574 people from 41 countries have gone into space according to the FAI criterion (587 people have qualified when including the US Department of Defense classification). The rest, therefore, are not recognized as commercial astronauts using FAI criterion.Īll other men and women traveled to outer space in non-winged rockets, the orbital Space Shuttle, or the sub-orbital Scaled Composites SpaceShipOne rocket spaceplane. Sturckow) had flown to space in the Space Shuttle already and thus already has been an FAI-recognized astronaut. There are also nine space travellers who surpassed the 50-mi-border on the sub-orbital SpaceShipTwo (including Richard Branson, founder of Virgin Galactic spaceflight company), and are thus recognized as (commercial) astronauts by the FAA but not by the FAI since they didn't surpass the 100-km-line while one of them ( Frederick W. However, Joe Engle would later go on to fly on the Space Shuttle, thus exceeding this limit. The other pilots did not reach the 100 km FAI limit. Walker, flew the X-15 above 100 km on two flights, becoming the first person to enter space twice. This list follows the FAI criterion.įrom the Department of Defense, eight USAF and NASA pilots qualified for the Astronaut Badge by flying the sub-orbital X-15 rocket spaceplane. In the 1960s, the United States Department of Defense awarded the rating of astronaut to military and civilian pilots who flew aircraft higher than 50 miles (80 km).
The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) defines spaceflight as any flight above 100 kilometres (62 mi).
The criteria for determining who has achieved human spaceflight vary. The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) defines spaceflight as any flight over 100 kilometres in altitude – the two grey-shaded regions.