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Space disaster

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Test pilot Stuart Present ejects safely from the Lunar Landing Training Vehicle. (NASA)
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Test pilot Stuart Present ejects safely from the Lunar Landing Training Vehicle. (NASA)

Space disasters, either during operations or training, have killed around 15 astronauts and 4 cosmonauts (5% of all people who have been in space, 2% per flight), and a much larger number of ground crew. This is an overview of all acknowledged fatalities and near-fatalities that occurred during manned space missions, accidents during astronaut training and during the testing , assembling or preparing for flight of manned and unmanned spacecraft. Not included are fatalities occuring during the ICBM accidents, and Russian or German rocket-fighter projects of World War II. Also not included are the rumors about alleged Russian space accidents prior to Gagarin's flight that allegedly have killed several cosmonauts, but were hushed up by the centalized Soviet press. (See Lost cosmonauts)

Spaceflight fatalities

(In the statistics below, 'astronaut' is applied to ALL space travelers to avoid the repetition of 'astronaut/cosmonaut' or other clumsy phrases.)

The history of space exploration has been marred by a number of tragedies that resulted in the deaths of the astronauts or ground crew. As of 2004, in-flight accidents had killed 18 astronauts, training accidents had claimed at least 11 astronauts and launchpad accidents had killed at least 70 ground crew.

About 2% of the manned launch/reentry attempts have killed their crew, with Soyuz and the Shuttle having almost the same death rates. Except for the X-15 (which is a suborbital rocket plane), other launchers have not launched sufficiently often for reasonable safety comparisons to be made. For example, it seems likely that Apollo would have eventually had a similar fatality rate if the program had continued to the present day.

About 5% of the people that have been launched have died doing so (because astronauts often launch more than once). As of November 2004, 439 individuals have flown on spaceflights: Russia/Soviet Union (96), USA (277), others (66). Twenty-two have died while in a spacecraft: Apollo 1 (3), Soyuz 1 (1), X-15-3(1), Soyuz 11 (3), Challenger (7), Columbia (7), totaling 18 astronauts (4.1%) and 4 cosmonauts (0.9% of all the people launched).

If Apollo 1 and X-15-3 are included as spaceflights, 5% (or 22) of the 439 have died on spaceflights. This includes Roger Chaffee (who never flew in space) and Michael J. Adams (who reached space by the U.S. definition but not the international definition, see below) in the spaceflight total and Grissom, White, Chaffee (the crew of Apollo 1) and Adams in the killed total.

If Apollo 1 and the X-15-3 are excluded; 4% (or 18) of the 437 have died while on a spaceflight. This excludes Gus Grissom, Ed White, Roger Chaffee, and Michael J. Adams from the killed total and Chaffee and Adams from the spaceflight total.

The Soyuz system is often considered to be more reliable than the Shuttle, because 14 have been killed in shuttle accidents (versus 4 killed in Soyuz accidents). However, the overall safety appears to be similar. No deaths have occurred on Soyuzs since 1971, and none with the current design of the Soyuz. Including the early Soyuz design, the average deaths per launched crew member on Soyuz are currently under 2%. However, there have also been several serious injuries, and some other incidents in which crews nearly died.

American astronauts that have lost their lives in the line of duty are memorialized by the Space Mirror Memorial at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Merritt Island, Florida. Cosmonauts that have died in the line of duty under the auspices of the Soviet Union were generally honored by burial at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in Moscow. It is unknown whether this remains tradition for Russia, since the Kremlin Wall Necropolis was largely a Communist honor and no cosmonauts have died in action since the Union fell.

Cosmonaut fatalities

The Soviet/Russian program has had two fatal missions for a total of four in-flight fatalities. One (Soyuz 1, 1967) due to parachute failure during landing (there were other problems, but this was the fatal failure), and the other (Soyuz 11, 1971) when a valve stuck open during separation of the descent module during reentry (see below for details). Of all fatal spaceflights by any country (as of 2006), only the crew of Soyuz 11 actually died in space.

In addition, the Soviet program suffered 2 mission-ending launch aborts that were potentially fatal.

In-flight accidents

Space Shuttle Challenger was torn apart 73 seconds after launch due to hot gases escaping the SRBs cutting a hole into the external tank. The accident resulted in the death of all seven crewmembers.
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Space Shuttle Challenger was torn apart 73 seconds after launch due to hot gases escaping the SRBs cutting a hole into the external tank. The accident resulted in the death of all seven crewmembers.

There have been five fatal in-flight accidents. In each case all crew were killed.

Columbia debris falling over Texas
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Columbia debris falling over Texas

Training accidents

In addition to accidents on spaceflights, astronauts have been killed while in training.

Near Fatalities

Apart from actual disasters, a number of missions resulted in some very near misses and also some training accidents that nearly resulted in deaths. In-flight near misses have included various reentry mishaps (in particular on Soyuz 5), the sinking of the Mercury 4 capsule, and the Voskhod 2 crew spending a night in dense forest surrounded by wolves. Additionally: Shuttle incidents generally look unspectacular, but are no less life threatening. Many of the Shuttle launches prior to Challenger arguably constituted near misses—partial burn through of the O-ring material in the solid rocket boosters had occurred many times. It is also unclear how close the Shuttle has come to disaster with foam shedding prior to Columbia, all of them could conceivably be considered near misses. On one flight, wiring faults threatened to prevent the main tank from separating. The very first Shuttle flight STS-1 suffered significant losses of thermal protection tiles, which could have caused a Columbia-type reentry disaster. Fortunately none of them were in a sufficiently critical area. On the same flight a different thermal protection breach allowed hot gas to weaken a landing gear strut, which buckled on landing.

Ground crew and On-ground Civilian fatalities

Many spacecraft and their boosters have been destroyed in accidents on launchpads.
During building of Launch Complex 39 at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, there were two deaths: Other deaths include:

Fatal accidents in which ground personnel were killed

! Date
| May 17, 1930 | October 10, 1933 | July 16, 1934 | October 24, 1960 | April 14, 1964 | May 7, 1964 | July 2, 1964 | August 3, 1965 | June 26, 1973 | March 18, 1980 | March 19, 1981 | May 5, 1995 | February 14, 1996 | October 1, 2001 | October 15, 2002 | August 22, 2003
Place Deaths Kind of disaster
Berlin, Germany 1 Max Valier killed by rocket engine explosion
Germany 3 Explosion in rocket manufacturing room of Tilling
Kummersdorf, Germany 3 Ground test engine explosion
Baikonur, Kazakhstan 126 Explosion of R-16 ICBM on launch pad (not space related) (see Nedelin catastrophe).
Cape Canaveral, USA 3 Rocket ignited in assembly room
Braunlage, Germany 3 Mail rocket built by Gerhard Zucker exploded and debris hit crowd of spectators
Cape Canaveral, Florida 1 Fall
Cape Canaveral, Florida 1 Lightning
Plesetsk, Russia 9 Launch explosion
Plesetsk, Russia 48 Launch explosion
Cape Canaveral, Florida 2 Anoxia
Kourou Space Centre, Guiana 2 Anoxia
Xichang, China 6 Rocket crashed in village
Cape Canaveral, Florida 1 Industrial accident
Plesetsk, Russia 1 Launch explosion
Alcantara, Brazil 21 Explosion during launch preparations

Other accidents

See also

External links

 


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