Browse Resources by Year
While satellites are essentially a platform upon which useful equipment can be mounted, space stations are a fundamentally different kind of asset. Space stations have been envisioned as permanent or semi-permanent bases where astronauts could take advantage of the microgravity and vacuum conditions to research new manufacturing techniques. In addition, space stations were foreseen as rest, refueling, and assembly points for vessels heading beyond Earth’s orbit.
Read MoreThe table below shows each spacefaring nation’s space launch vehicle platforms active in the current year. Launch tracking and launch system information relies on various primary and government sources. The current year’s launch reliability shows the number of successful launches over the number of total launches for the year.
Read MoreIt is relatively simple to place a satellite into orbit when compared with launching humans to space. Humans have more complex needs, such as breathable air, food, staying warm, staying cool, and protection from the space environment. Humans must also be able to return safely to Earth from their trip to space. Over the years, a variety of spacecraft were specifically designed to fulfill these requirements. Rockets, originally designed to return to selected points of the Earth quickly and destructively, began to incorporate changes for human needs and requirements as well. Two nations, the United States and Russia, pioneered the development of space systems to launch humans into space more than half a century ago.
Read MoreWhat does it take to deploy a satellite? What is required to command it to point at an area of the Earth, or into the depths of outer space, and then receive useful data from the satellite’s on-board equipment? Space infrastructure ties all space operations together, whether conducted by military, government, commercial, or even volunteer organizations. Rockets rising from the Earth into space; the facilities and spaceports designed to launch specific rocket types; the command and space operations centers full of space professionals monitoring rocket and satellite health while sending out invisible commands; the space stations and capsules carrying astronauts across space, sending streams of data back to Earth; and the satellites of many different nations, silently moving around the Earth and accomplishing amazing feats in our solar system—all of this constitutes space infrastructure.
Read MoreAround the globe, many smaller nations—whether in terms of economy or population size—are investing in space projects or programs. The exhibit below shows the most recent available annual budget for civil space activities in a number of selected space states.
Read MoreSouth Korea’s civil space program is overseen by the Ministry of Science, ICT, and Future Planning (MSIP). The Ministry also drafts, authorizes, and coordinates national space policy and has regulatory authority over space object registration, launch authorization, and launch insurance requirements. South Korea’s 2014 budget was ₩## billion (US$## million), which was ##% of South Korea’s 2014 national budget of ₩## trillion (US$## billion). The largest portion of the total space budget was allocated to the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI), which received approximately ₩## billion (US$## million).
Read MoreIn 2014, Russia’s space agency Roscosmos received a budget of approximately ## billion rubles (US$## billion). This is a ##% increase from the 2013 budget of ## billion rubles (US$## billion). This was the last budget to be assigned to Roscosmos prior to a reorganization of Russian space activities. In 2014, the Russian government consolidated organizations whose activities include developing, manufacturing, testing, shipping, and selling rockets. This joint stock company, called United Rocket and Space Corporation (URSC), was wholly owned by the Russian Federation and combined 62 entities. In January 2015, Russian President Vladimir Putin approved the further consolidation of URSC and Roscosmos.
Read MoreJapan’s FY 2014 space budget, which extended from April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2015, encompassed 11 different government organizations and totaled ¥## billion ($## billion), which included ¥## billion ($## million) in supplemental funds carried over from FY 2013. This was an ##% increase over its 2013 budget of ¥## billion ($## billion).
Read MoreIsrael often works with other countries to cooperate in its space endeavors, whether civil, national security (or dual-use), or commercial. Its civil space organization, the Israel Space Agency (ISA), overseen by the Ministry of Science, Technology & Space, has had a reference annual budget of ## million shekels (US$## million) since 2012—prior to that it received a nominal fee for basic operations, and any needs for individual projects beyond a few million shekels had to be requested from the Ministry of Finance.
Read MoreIn 2014, India’s Department of Space received a budgetary allocation of ## billion rupees (US$## billion) during its fiscal year, which ran from April 1, 2014 to March 31, 2015. This represented a ##% increase over the 2013 allocation of ## billion rupees (US$## billion).
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