List of astronauts by year of selection


This is a list of astronauts by year of selection: people selected to train for a human spaceflight program to command, pilot, or serve as a crew member of a spacecraft. Until recently, astronauts were sponsored and trained exclusively by governments, either by the military or by civilian space agencies. However, with the advent of suborbital flight starting with privately funded SpaceShipOne in [|2004], a new category of astronaut was created: the commercial astronaut.
While the term astronaut is sometimes applied to anyone who trains for travels into space—including scientists, politicians, journalists, and tourists—this article lists only professional astronauts, those who have been selected to train as a profession. This includes national space programs and private industry programs which train and/or hire their own professional astronauts.
More than 500 people have trained as astronauts. A list of everyone who has flown in space can be found at List of space travelers by name.
1950s: [|1958] [|1959]
1960s: [|1960] [|1962] [|1963] [|1964] [|1965] [|1966] [|1967] [|1968] [|1969]
1970s: [|1970] [|1971] [|1972] [|1973] [|1974] [|1976] [|1977] [|1978] [|1979]
1980s: [|1980] [|1982] [|1983] [|1984] [|1985] [|1986] [|1987] [|1988] [|1989]
1990s: [|1990] [|1992] [|1994] [|1996] [|1997] [|1998] [|1999]
2000s: [|2000] [|2003] 2004 [|2006] [|2008] [|2009]
2010s: [|2010] [|2011] [|2012] [|2013] [|2014] [|2015] [|2017] [|2018]

North American X-15 Pilots Group (USA)

1958

June 25 – Man in Space Soonest

1959

April 9 – NASA Group 1Mercury Seven

1960

March 7 – Air Force Group 1
April – Dyna–Soar Group 1

1962

March 12 – Female Group
September 17 – NASA Group 2The Next Nine, aka The Nifty Nine, The New Nine
September 19 – Dyna-Soar Group 2

1963

January 10 – Air Force Group 2
October 17, 1963 – NASA Group 3The Fourteen

1964

January 25 – Air Force Group 2 Supplemental
May 26 – Voskhod Group – Medical Group 1
June 11 – Civilian Specialist Group 1

1965

June 1 – Journalist Group 1
June 1 – Medical Group 2
June 28 – NASA Group 4The Scientists
October 28 – Air Force Group 3
November – USAF MOL Group 1

1966

April 4 – NASA Group 5
May 23 – Civilian Specialist Group 2
June 30 – USAF MOL Group 2
September – Military Cosmonaut Group
1966–67 – Military Cosmonaut Group

1967

January 31 – Civilian Specialist Group 2 Supplemental
February – Soviet crewed lunar programs cosmonauts in two training groups
May 7 – Air Force Group 4
May 22 – Academy of Sciences Group
June – USAF MOL Group 3
October 4 – NASA Group 6XS-11 ' '''
Chapman, Holmquest, Llewellyn, and O'Leary resigned from NASA before the end of the Apollo program, and the rest of the group members eventually flew as Mission Specialists during the Space Shuttle program. With his flight on STS-80 at the age of 61, Musgrave held the title of "oldest astronaut" prior to John Glenn's second flight. England resigned from NASA in 1972 but rejoined the astronaut corps in 1979.

1968

May 27 – Civilian Specialist Group 3

1969

August 14 – NASA Group 7
September 10 – Civilian Engineer Group

1970

April 27 – Air Force Group 5

1971

February 25 – 1971 Scientific Group
May – Shuguang Group 1970

1972

March 22 – Civilian Specialist Group 4
March 22 – Medical Group 3 – USSR

1973

March 27 – Civilian Specialist Group 5

1974

January 1 – Physician Group

1976

August 23 – Air Force Group 6 – Space shuttle Buran crew
Protchenko was removed from the squad for health reasons, Ivanov was killed in the crash of a MiG-27 during test pilot training and Kadenyuk was removed from the squad over marital issues. Vasyutin concealed a medical condition from doctors that resulted in his falling ill during the Soyuz T-14/ Salyut 7 EO-4 flight causing the premature termination of the mission 4 months early. This resulted in more stringent cosmonaut medical checks which Moskalenko and Saley failed.
November 25 – 1976 Intercosmos Group

1977

July 12 – The first group of test pilots for Buran – Gromov Flight Research Institute group

1978

January 16 – NASA Group 8TFNG Thirty-Five New Guys
March 1 – 1978 Intercosmos Group
May 1 – Spacelab Payload Specialists Group 1

1979

August – USAF Manned Spaceflight Engineer Program – Group 1
April 1 – 1979 Intercosmos Group

1980

May 29 – NASA Group 9
July 30 – LII–1/IMBP–3/MAP/NPOE-5/AN–2 Cosmonaut Group
1980 – CNES Group 1

1982

August – USAF Manned Spaceflight Engineer Program
September 11 – 1982 Intercosmos Group
December 1 – Spacelab Payload Specialists Group

1983

April 25 – The second group of test pilots for the project "Buran" – Gromov Flight Research Institute group)
December – NRC Group

1984

February 15 – NPOE–6 Cosmonaut Group
May 23 – NASA Group 10 – The Maggots
June 12 – The third group of test pilots for the project "Buran" – Gromov Flight Research Institute group
Victor Zabolotski.

1985

May – ISRO Insat Group
June
June 4 – NASA Group 11
July 19 – NASA Teacher in Space Program
August 1 – 1985 NASDA Group
August – USAF Manned Spaceflight Engineer Program – Group 3
September 2 – GKNII–2/NPOE–7 Cosmonaut Group
September 18 – CNES Group 2
September 30 – 1985 Intercosmos Group
October – Indonesian Palapa Group
December 27 – ATLAS–1

1986

January 2 – The fourth group of test pilots for the project "Buran" – Gromov Flight Research Institute group
Sergey Tresvyatski and Yuri Schaeffer.

1987

January 5 – Shipka Group
March 26 – TsPK–8/NPOE-8 Cosmonaut Group
June 5 – NASA Group 12 – The GAFFers
August 3 – 1987 German Group

1988

February 12 – OS "Mir" Group

1989

January 25 – IMBP–5/GKNII–3/NPOE–9/TsPK–10 Cosmonaut Group
22 March – The last group of test pilots for the Buran project – Gromov Flight Research Institute group)
May 23 – 1989 Italian Group
September 29 – ATLAS Payload Specialists
November 25 – Project Juno

1990

January 17 – NASA Group 13 – The Hairballs
February – CNES Group 3
May 11 – TsPK–11 Cosmonaut Group
October 8 – 1990 German Group

1992

March 3NPOE-10 Cosmonaut Group
March 31 – NASA Group 14 – The Hogs
April – 1992 NASDA Group
June – CSA Group 2
May 15 – 1992 ESA Group

1994

April 1 – NPOE–11 Cosmonaut Group
December 12 – NASA Group 15 – The Flying Escargot

1996

February 9 – MKS/RKKE–12 Cosmonaut Group
March 26 – MKS supplemental cosmonaut group
May 1 – NASA Group 16 – The Sardines
June – NASDA Group
October – China Group 1996
November – Shuttle-97 Group

1997

April – Shuttle Group
July 28 – TsPK–12/RKKE-13 Cosmonaut Group

1998

January – Chinese Group 1
February 24 – RKKE-14 Cosmonaut Group
Mart 2 – OS "Mir" Stefanik Group
June 4 – NASA Group 17 – The Penguins
October 7 – 1998 ESA Group

1999

February – 1999 NASDA Group
1 November – 1999 ESA Group

2000

July 26 – NASA Group 18 – The Bugs

2003

May 23 – TsPK-13/RKKE-15/IMBP-6 Cosmonaut Group
Kazakhstan – Group 1
September 11 – SpaceShipOne

2004

May 6 – NASA Group 19 – The Peacocks

2006

March 30 – Virgin Galactic Astronaut Pilots Group
September 4 – Angkasawan Group
October 11 – TsPK-14/RKKE-16 Cosmonaut Group
December 25 – Korean Astronaut Program Group

2008

July – Virgin Galactic Astronaut Pilots Group

2009

February 25 – JAXA Group
May 13 – CSA Group
May 20 – ESA Group – The Shenanigans
June 29 – NASA Group 20 – Chumps
September 8 – JAXA Group

2010

March – Chinese Group 2
April 12 – [|Association of Spaceflight Professionals] – Group 1
June 7 – Association of Spaceflight Professionals – Group 2
October 12 – TsPK–15/RKKE–17 Cosmonaut Group

2011

January–February – Enrolled in a United squad of Roscosmos astronauts
From 1 January 2011 at the Research Institute of the Y. A. Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center is a single detachment of the Russian Space Agency astronauts, which in 2015 consisted of 38 people. The next set of candidates was announced at the beginning of 2016, then postponed until 2017. On September 2016, the unit counted 31 astronauts.
February 28 – Association of Spaceflight Professionals – Group 3
October 26 – Virgin Galactic Astronaut Pilots Group

2012

February – Enrolled in a United squad of Roscosmos cosmonauts
October 30 – TsPK– Addition Group

2013

May 8 Virgin Galactic Astronaut Pilots Group
June 3 – Association of Spaceflight Professionals – Group 4
June 17 – NASA Group 21 – 8-Balls '''

2014

July 24 – Virgin Galactic Astronaut Pilots Group
August 14 – Individual set into a United detachment of Roscosmos astronauts

2015

January 23 – Virgin Galactic Astronaut Pilots Group
July 9 – NASA Commercial Crew Program
July – ESA Astronaut Corps
Copenhagen Suborbitals

2017

June 7 – NASA Group 22 – The Turtles
July 1 – 2017 CSA Group
April 19 – 2017 Die Astronautin Selection

2018

August 10 – 17th Cosmonaut Group
September 3 – Emirati Astronaut Group

Commercial advances

The space market exceeds $330 billion today. Current estimates show the number growing to nearly $3 trillion over the next three decades. Human spaceflight is one of the sectors positioned for greatest growth. Commercial astronauts are expected to fill the gap in this transition.
Ansari X Prize
The first commercial astronauts were selected by contenders for the Ansari X PRIZE, the first nongovernmental reusable crewed spacecraft, in 2004. Among them include Starchaser Industries directors Steve Bennett and Matt Shewbridge; former NASA astronauts John Bennett Herrington, Richard Searfoss and pilot Dick Rutan ; Canadian engineer Brian Feeney ; and veteran Wally Funk from Mercury 13.

Boeing

Boeing hired former NASA astronaut Chris Ferguson to join the Space Exploration Team. Candidates for Boeing's astronaut corps include former NASA astronauts, commercial scientist astronauts and test pilots who have never flown in space.

SpaceX

has employed former NASA astronauts, but did not select any SpaceX employees to fly its commercial vehicles to the International Space Station. No decision has been made about any non-ISS flights.

Association of Spaceflight Professionals

The world's first commercial astronaut corps, the Association of Spaceflight Professionals received funding for a series of crewed spaceflight missions through the NASA Flight Opportunities Program in March 2012.
Several million dollars have been allocated for detailed spectroscopic analysis of high-altitude noctilucent cloud formations on suborbital flights using rapidly reusable, task-and-deploy spaceplanes.
The organization's commercial astronauts go through a selection process modeled after the NASA Astronaut Corps, which involves NASA astronauts. Some of its members serve as astronaut trainers themselves; some have interviewed as finalists in national space agency astronaut candidate selection campaigns. Yi So-yeon, who completed an orbital mission to the International Space Station, is a member of the organization.

Virgin Galactic

and Virgin Galactic astronauts include Michael Alsbury, Rob Bendall, Richard Branson, Peter Kalogiannis, Niki Lauda, Brian Maisler, Clint Nichols, Wes Persall, Burt Rutan, Peter Seiffert, Peter Siebold, Mark Stucky and Dave Mackay.

Teachers in Space

The Teachers in Space program began in 2005. In 2012, the United States Rocket Academy announced that the program was expanding to include a broader range of participants, renaming the initiative Citizens in Space. For its first phase, Citizens in Space selected and trained ten citizen astronaut candidates to fly as payload operators, including four astronaut candidates already in training. Informal educator and aerospace historian Gregory Kennedy was among those listed.

Copenhagen Suborbitals

seeks to make Denmark the fourth nation to launch humans above the Kármán line.

Mars One

was a private initiative with claims to establish a permanent human colony on Mars by 2023. The project was led by Dutch entrepreneur Bas Lansdorp, who announced plans for the Mars One mission on May 2012.
A Mars One astronaut selection announcement was made on April 19, 2013, and started its search on April 22, 2013. By August 2013, Mars One had more than 200,000 applicants from around the world. Round Two selection results were declared on December 30, 2013, wherein a total of 1058 applicants from 107 countries were selected.
Mars One received a variety of criticism relating to medical, technical and financial feasibility. Unverified rumors claimed that Mars One was a scam designed to take as much money as possible from donors, including those participating as contestants.
In February 2019, it was reported that Mars One had declared bankruptcy in a Swiss court on January 15, 2019, and was permanently dissolved as a company.

Inspiration Mars

, an American nonprofit founded by Dennis Tito, aimed to launch a human mission to flyby Mars in January 2018, or, as the 2018 date was missed, in 2021. Flight candidates included husband and wife travel duo Jane Poynter and Taber MacCallum, who participated in the Biosphere 2 experiment.

Waypoint2Space

was granted FAA safety approval for its training services in 2014. The company works in collaboration with NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston to provide spaceflight training.

Truax Engineering

The first private firm that tried to build a suborbital space rocket, Truax Engineering, selected company employee, engineer and lifelong aviator Jeana Yeager as the first test pilot for its rocket. The project was halted in 1991 due to lack of funds.