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===To infinity and beyond===
===To infinity and beyond===
* [[List of fictional astronauts (beyond near-future capabilities)]]
* [[List of fictional astronauts (beyond near-future capabilities)]]

==Modern period==
Astronauts from recent times, mostly using the [[Space Shuttle]].

===2010–2019===
{|Class="wikitable"
|-
!Name(s)
!Appeared in
!Program / Mission / Spacecraft
!Fictional date
|-
|bgcolor="silver" colspan="7" align="center"| '''(2010–2019)'''
|-
|rowspan="2"|Keith Palmer (Founder/CEO)<br />Beau Lendell (Pilot)<br />Dominic Cross (Passenger)<br />Sam Gardner (Passenger)
|''[[CSI: Miami]]''<br />''[[CSI: Miami (season 8)#Episodes|Miami, We Have a Problem]]'' (2010), TV
|Prime Mover Aerospace:<br />Orbiter
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Gardner is murdered aboard commercial spacecraft in low Earth orbit and his body dumped from helicopter.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cbs.com/primetime/csi_miami/recaps/815/recaps.php?season=8|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110906130727/http://www.cbs.com/primetime/csi_miami/recaps/815/recaps.php?season=8 |title=CSI: Miami Recap: Miami, We Have A Problem |publisher=CBS Interactive |year=2010|archive-date=September 6, 2011 |accessdate=June 12, 2015}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|International Space Station:<br />Krashinsky<br /><br />Space Eagle:<br />Oleg Olesky (Captain)<br />Tyler Kirkpatrick (Co-Pilot)<br />Vladimir Fedorov<br />Delia Chase (Passenger)
|''[[Endgame (TV series)|Endgame]]''<br />''[[Endgame (TV series)#Episodes|Huxley, We Have a Problem]]'' (2011), TV
|[[International Space Station]]<br /><br />Chase Galactic:<br />Space Eagle
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|ISS veteran Olesky, slated to captain first commercial space carrier, is accused of murder. Kirkpatrick is a former [[NASA]] astronaut.<ref>{{cite episode |last=Manson |first=Graeme |authorlink=Graeme Manson |title=Huxley, We Have a Problem |series=[[Endgame (TV series)|Endgame]] |season=1 |number=9 |date=May 9, 2011 |network=[[Showcase (Canadian TV channel)|Showcase]]}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Shenzhou 10:<br />Chaoyang Xie, Lt. Col.<br />Wu Changfeng, Maj.<br />Xue Yimeng, Lt.<br /><br />Shenzhou 11:<br />Zhang Tiancong, Col.<br />Wang Guan San, Lt. Col.<br />Zhou Xiaosu, Lt.
|''《飞天》'' (2011) (English title ''Flying''), Chinese film
|[[Shenzhou program|Shenzhou]] program
|2008–2014
|-
|colspan="3"|Chinese dramatization of a series of the manned spaceflights, following the "real" [[Shenzhou 7]], to China's space station. Col. Zhang is a veteran taikonaut, passed over for the earlier manned missions, while Lieutenants Xue and Zhou are female fighter pilots, competing for the honor of being the first Chinese woman to be launched into space.
|-
|rowspan="2"|Eric Johnson (USN)
|''Launch'' (2011), short film
|[[NASA]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Pilot selected for [[NASA Astronaut Group 21]] learns his wife has cancer.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=Craig Hung (Writer/Director) |year=2011 |title=Launch |medium=Motion picture |url=https://vimeo.com/33680533|access-date=May 8, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Makarand "Mac" Joshi (India)<br />Five unnamed astronauts
|''Nothingness'' (2011), short film
|[[NASA]]:<br />Ralford 11 (space probe)
|November 11, 2011
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronauts on mission to learn what happens after death.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=Nikhil Allug (Writer/Director) |year=2011 |title=Nothingness |medium=Motion picture |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXscBidL_Co|access-date=May 9, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|[[NASA]]:<br />Jeff Clark, Maj.<br />Colin "Mac" MacAffie<br /><br />''Endeavour'':<br />Deacon "Deke" Stockard, Cmdr. (USN) (Commander)<br />Kurt Muir, Capt. (Pilot)<br />Janine Harmon, Dr. (Heart surgeon)<br />Two unnamed mission specialists<br /><br />International Space Station:<br />Micah Petrenko (Russia)
|''Space in His Heart'' (2011), novel
|[[Space Shuttle]]<br />''[[Space Shuttle Endeavour|Endeavour]]''<br /><br />[[International Space Station]]
|November 1999 – January 2000<br /><br />July 8–21, 2011
|-
|colspan="3"|Stockard is promoted as a sex symbol to enhance NASA's image.<ref>{{cite book |last=St. Claire |first=Roxanne |authorlink=Roxanne St. Claire |title=Space in His Heart |year=2011 |publisher= |isbn=978-0615574424}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|James Shepard (Navigation)<br />Yuri Hayys (Bioscientist)<br />Jerrie Cobb (Botanist)<br />Thomas Lovell (Commander)<br />Joe Engle (Solar Tech)<br />Alan Brahm (Engineer)<br />Robert Crippen (Engineer)
|''Vacuity'' (2011), short film
|XOEH:<br />[[Space station]]<br />''Intrepid'' (spacecraft)
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Brahm, trapped in space station airlock, must choose between his own survival and that of his crewmates.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=Michael Matzur (Writer/Director) |year=2011 |title=Vacuity |medium=Motion picture |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDbm4hpVs58|access-date=July 14, 2016 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Four unnamed American astronauts<br />Two unnamed Russian cosmonauts
|''[[The Age of Miracles (novel)|The Age of Miracles]]'' (2012), novel
|[[International Space Station]]<br />''[[Orion (spacecraft)|Orion]]''
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronauts stranded aboard space station when [[Earth's rotation]] mysteriously slows.<ref>{{cite book |last=Walker |first=Karen Thompson |authorlink=Karen Thompson Walker |title=[[The Age of Miracles (novel)|The Age of Miracles]] |year=2012 |publisher=Random House |isbn=978-0-8129-9297-7}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|''Intrepid'':<br />Tony Drake (ISA) (Commander)<br />Malory Archer (ISIS)<br />[[Sterling Archer|Sterling Malory Archer]] (ISIS)<br />Cyril Figgis (ISIS)<br />Raymond Q. "Ray" Gillette (ISIS)<br />Lana Anthony Kane (ISIS)<br />Pamela "Pam" Poovey (ISIS)<br />Cheryl Tunt (ISIS)<br /><br />''Horizon'':<br />Kellogg, Capt. (Commander)<br />Dave<br />Trish<br />Unnamed astronauts
|''[[Archer (TV series)|Archer]]''<br />[[Space Race (Archer)|''Space Race: Part I'', ''Space Race: Part II'']] (2012), TV
|International Space Agency (ISA):<br />[[Space Station]] ''Horizon''<br />[[Space Shuttle]] ''Intrepid''
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Agents of [[International Secret Intelligence Service]] (ISIS) are hired to take back ''Horizon'' from mutineers, but are actually required for a different purpose.
|-
|rowspan="2"|Nicholas Rice, Cmdr.
|''The Astro Outlaw'' (2012), chapter book
|[[NASA]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Moon rock is stolen from astronaut during appearance at [[Houston Astros]] game.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kelly |first=David A. |authorlink=David A. Kelly |title=The Astro Outlaw |series=Ballpark Mysteries |volume=4 |year=2012 |publisher=Random House |isbn=978-0-375-86883-2}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Dimitri Rezinov<br />[[Howard Wolowitz|Howard Joel "Froot Loops" Wolowitz]] (Payload Specialist)
|''[[The Big Bang Theory]]''<br />''[[The Big Bang Theory (season 5)#Episodes|The Countdown Reflection]]'', [[The Big Bang Theory (season 6)#Episodes|''The Date Night Variable'', ''The Decoupling Fluctuation'', ''The Higgs Boson Observation'', ''The Re-Entry Minimization'']] (2012), TV
|[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]] (possibly [[Soyuz TMA-04M]])<br />[[International Space Station]] ([[Expedition 31]])
|Contemporary (Summer 2012)
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronauts on mission to ISS with [[Mike Massimino]].<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.space.com/17891-big-bang-theory-space-set-design.html |title=How 'The Big Bang Theory' Sent Howard Wolowitz to Space |last=Pearlman |first=Robert Z. |authorlink=Robert Pearlman |date=October 4, 2012 |publisher=[[Space.com]] |accessdate=August 4, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Faberman |first=Adam |title=The Big Bang Theory: The Official Trivia Guide |year=2015 |publisher=[[Touchstone Books]] |pages=101, 106, 260, 264, 353–354 |isbn=978-1-5011-2715-1}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Zach, Cmdr. (no last name given)
|''Blast Off'' (2012), short film
|[[International Space Station]]
|20XX [''sic'']
|-
|colspan="3"|[[NASA]] astronaut launches from ISS into [[Thermosphere|thermospheric]] orbit. Story is probably, but not certainly, a daydream.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=Jonathan Gribbin (Director/Co-Writer) |year=2012 |title=Blast Off |medium=Motion picture |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7ql6ziVZXo|access-date=May 9, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Roger McMillan
|''The Final Breaths of Astronaut Roger McMillan on the US Glory'' (2012), web video
|U.S. ''Glory'' ([[geosynchronous]] [[space station]])<br />[[Orion (spacecraft)#Crew module (CM)|Orion CM]] (shown on ''Glory'''s computer screens)
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|[[NASA]] astronaut monitoring orbit of meteor named "Vanessa".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIzOfG8vs7k |author=CinJaxon |date=January 29, 2012 |title=The Final Breaths of Astronaut Roger McMillan on the US Glory |publisher=YouTube |accessdate=February 11, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|International Space Station:<br />Bill Eriksson (Mission commander)<br />Keith "Chip" Corcoran, Capt. (Ph.D.) (USAF)<br />Tim Fisher<br />Petra Gutierrez<br />Mort Stevens (MS-2)<br /><br />International Space Station:<br />Yoshida<br />Eichhorn<br />Jones<br />Collins (no first names given)<br />Unnamed astronaut
|''The Infinite Tides'' (2012), novel
|[[Space Shuttle]]<br />[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|NASA astronaut Corcoran tries to adjust to suburban life after his daughter dies while he is on the ISS.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kiefer |first=Christian |authorlink=Christian Kiefer |title=The Infinite Tides |year=2012 |publisher=[[Bloomsbury USA]] |isbn=978-1-60819-810-8}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|''Spektr'':<br />Vasily Konstantin ([[Russian Federal Space Agency|FKA]])<br />Other unnamed cosmonauts
|''Juggernaut'' (2012), novel
|Russian Federal Space Agency (FKA):<br />[[Space Station]]<br />[[Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-105|Spaceplane]] ''Spektr''
|c. 1990s and 2005
|-
|colspan="3"|Cosmonaut launched on a secret mission to a high-orbit space station covertly constructed at the same time as the [[Mir]] space station, returns to Earth years later contaminated with a bio-mechanical parasite.<ref>{{cite book |last=Baker |first=Adam |title=Juggernaut |year=2012 |publisher=[[Hodder & Stoughton]] |isbn=978-1-444-70907-0}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Unnamed commander<br />Unnamed astronauts
|''[[Mark Kelly|Mousetronaut: Based on a (Partially) True Story]]'' (2012), picture book
|[[Space Shuttle]]<br />''[[Space Shuttle Atlantis|Atlantis]]''
|Recent Past
|-
|colspan="3"|Mouse named Meteor saves space shuttle mission.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kelly |first=Mark |others=Illustrated by [[C. F. Payne]] |title=Mousetronaut: Based on a (Partially) True Story |publisher=Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-4424-5824-6}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Fiona MacLeod Starr
|''Once Upon a Toad'' (2012), novel
|[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]]<br />[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|[[NASA]] astronaut's daughter has weird experiences while her mother is in space.<ref>{{cite book |last=Frederick |first=Heather Vogel |authorlink=Heather Vogel Frederick |title=Once Upon a Toad |year=2012 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |isbn=978-1-4169-8478-8}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|James Ford
|''Pantheon'' (2012), short film
|''Pantheon'' ([[space station]]) (UK?)
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronaut alone on space station at time of catastrophe on Earth.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=[[Frederick Lloyd (director)|Frederick Lloyd]] (Director) |year=2012 |title=Pantheon |medium=Motion picture |url=https://vimeo.com/42293055|access-date=January 7, 2016 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Allegra (NASA)<br />Gio (Italy) (no last names given)
|''[[Touch (TV series)|Touch]]''<br />''[[List of Touch episodes#Season 1 (2012)|Zone of Exclusion]]'' (2012), TV
|[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Italian astronaut loses communications with colleague and Houston during EVA.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fox.com/touch/recaps/season-1/episode-8|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130209183357/http://www.fox.com/touch/recaps/season-1/episode-8 |title=FOX Broadcasting Company - Zone of Exclusion - Recaps - Touch on FOX |date=May 2012|archive-date=February 9, 2013 |publisher=FOX |accessdate=April 29, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Pete Seabrook, Col. (USMC)
|''[[Blue Bloods (TV series)|Blue Bloods]]''<br />''[[Blue Bloods (season 3)#Episodes|No Regrets]]'' (2013), TV
|[[Space Shuttle]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Retired astronaut who flew on every shuttle except ''[[Space Shuttle Endeavour|Endeavour]]'' is drinking too much after divorce. He is wearing an [[STS-72]] patch on his shirt.
|-
|rowspan="2"|Gordon McClintock, Cmdr. ([[NASA]])<br />A. Borovsky (Russia)<br />Unnamed astronauts
|''[[Defiance (TV series)|Defiance]]''<br />''[[I Just Wasn't Made for These Times (Defiance)|I Just Wasn't Made For These Times]]'' (2013), TV
|[[International Space Station]] ''Bravery Nine''<br />[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]]
|2013<br /><br />2046
|-
|colspan="3"|In 2013, aliens kill space station crew and create double of McClintock with implanted memories. McClintock was a mission specialist on [[STS-124]] in May 2008.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.syfy.com/defiance/episodes/season/1/episode/8/i-just-wasnt-made-for-these-times |title=I Just Wasn't Made For These Times |year=2015 |publisher=[[Syfy]] |accessdate=April 28, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Unnamed astronaut
|''Echoes'' (2013), short film
|Unknown
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Spacewalking astronaut catches pink balloon.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=Campbell Hooper & Joel Kefali (Directors) |year=2013 |title=Echoes |medium=Motion picture |url=https://vimeo.com/channels/lexusshortfilms/109228609|access-date=May 10, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|STS-157:<br />Matthew "Matt" Kowalsky, Lt. (Commander)<br />Ryan Stone, Dr. (Mission Specialist)<br />Shariff Dasari (Mission Specialist)<br />Evans<br />Thomas
|''[[Gravity (2013 film)|Gravity]]'' (2013), film
|[[Space Shuttle]]<br />''Explorer'' ([[STS-157]])<br /><br />[[International Space Station]]<br />[[Soyuz TMA-14M]]<br /><br />''[[Tiangong]]''<br />''[[Shenzhou program|Shenzhou]]''
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronauts stranded in orbit after [[Kessler syndrome]]-inspired collision during spacewalk.<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Cohen |first1=David S. |last2=McNary |first2=Dave |title=Alfonso Cuaron Returns to the Bigscreen After Seven Years With ‘Gravity’ |url=http://variety.com/2013/film/news/alfonso-cuaron-returns-to-the-bigscreen-after-seven-years-with-gravity-1200596518/ |magazine=Variety |date=September 2013 |accessdate=December 6, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://moria.co.nz/sciencefiction/gravity-2013.htm |title=Gravity (2013) |first=Richard |last=Scheib |work=Moria-The Science Fiction, Horror & Fantasy Review |accessdate=September 27, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Brode|2015|pp=366–369}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Pysters<br />Corsi, Col. (no first names given)<br />Keith Clone (Mechanic)
|''[[Richard Melo|Happy Talk]]'' (2013), novel
|[[Skylab]]
|1975
|-
|colspan="3"|Novel's penultimate epilogue involves [[NASA]] mission to repair Skylab's gyroscopes.<ref>{{cite book |last=Melo |first=Richard |authorlink=Richard Melo |chapter=The Celestial and the Extraterrestrial (1975) |title=Happy Talk |year=2013 |pages=309–312 |publisher=[[Red Lemonade (publisher)|Red Lemonade]] |isbn=978-1-935869-17-7}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Unnamed commander<br/ >Unnamed pilot
|''SKYN Condoms Presents: Naked Astronaut – The Closest Thing To Wearing Nothing'' (2013), web video
|[[Space Shuttle]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Shuttle astronaut chooses not to wear clothes during lift-off.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.theonion.com/video/skyn-condoms-presents-naked-astronaut-the-closest--50254 |date=November 7, 2013 |title=SKYN Condoms Presents: Naked Astronaut – The Closest Thing To Wearing Nothing |publisher=Onion Inc. |accessdate=August 6, 2015}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Garrison Sterling
|''Space in the Heart'' (2013), novel
|[[Space Shuttle]]
|1999, 2010
|-
|colspan="3"|STS-107 shuttle mission specialist whose wife is murdered prior to his flight.<ref>{{cite book |last=Walther |first=Rodney |title=Space in the Heart |publisher=Redstone Ranch Press |year=2013 |isbn=0982944632}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|[[NASA]]:<br />Andy Hawkins<br />Roy Manley, Capt. (USN)<br /><br />International Space Station:<br />Yuri Koslov, Cmdr.<br />Michael<br />Molly (no last names given)<br />3 unnamed astronauts<br /><br />Soyuz rescue vehicle:<br />Unnamed cosmonaut
|''[[Space Warriors]]'' (2013), TV movie
|[[International Space Station]]<br />[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]]<br />Soyuz rescue vehicle
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|[[United States Space Camp]] participants, including former astronaut Hawkins' son, compete for ride to space aboard [[Orion (spacecraft)|Orion]] II, but must intervene when crisis strikes the ISS.
|-
|rowspan="2"|Chet Minor, Maj.
|''[[George Brown, Class Clown]]''<br />''How Do You Pee in Space?'' (2014), chapter book
|[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronaut interviewed by fourth-grader on school TV station.<ref>{{cite book |last=Krulik |first=Nancy |authorlink=Nancy E. Krulik |others=Illustrated by Aaron Blecha |title=How Do You Pee in Space? |series=[[George Brown, Class Clown]] |volume=13 |year=2014 |publisher=Grosset & Dunlap |isbn=978-0-448-46113-7}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Unnamed janitor<br />Unnamed night watchman<br />Unnamed astronauts
|"The Janitor in Space" (2014), short story
|[[Space station]]
|Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Female ex-convict works as janitor on space station.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Sparks |first=Amber |authorlink=Amber Sparks |title=The Janitor in Space |journal=[[American Short Fiction]] |url=http://americanshortfiction.org/2014/07/01/janitor-space/ |date=July 1, 2014 |accessdate=February 27, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Sparks |first=Amber |chapter=The Janitor in Space |pages=1–5 |title=The Unfinished World: And Other Stories |year=2016 |publisher=[[Liveright Publishing Corporation]] |isbn=978-1-63149-090-3}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Cash Maddux (Mission Specialist)<br />Herbert "Herb" Swanschbaum{{efn|Named "Swanschbaumer" on p. 137, but "Swanschbaum" on pp. 135-136 and 220.}} (Mission Specialist)
|''[[Jennifer Brown (author)|Life on Mars]]'' (2014), novel
|[[NASA]]
|Contemporary (Summer – April)
|-
|colspan="3"|Rival astronauts from the space shuttle era. Maddux never flew in space due to high blood pressure.<ref>{{cite book |last=Brown |first=Jennifer |authorlink=Jennifer Brown (author) |title=Life on Mars |year=2014 |publisher=Bloomsbury |isbn=978-1-61963-252-3}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Edmund (no last name given)
|''[[Oliver Jeffers|Once Upon an Alphabet]]'' (2014), picture book
|Unknown
|Contemporary?
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronaut who is afraid of heights.<ref>{{cite book |last=Jeffers |first=Oliver |authorlink=Oliver Jeffers |title=Once Upon an Alphabet |year=2014 |publisher=[[Philomel Books]] |isbn=978-0-399-16791-1}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Commander<br />Flight Engineer<br />Two Science Officers<br />Unnamed doctor (Russian)<br />Unnamed Russian cosmonauts<br />Harrison (Technical Mission Specialist)<br />Wallace (Technical Mission Specialist)<br />Unnamed Technical Mission Specialist
|"The Serial Killer's Astronaut Daughter" (2014), short story
|Private [[space station]]
|Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Unnamed Technical Mission Specialist learns her blological father is on Death Row.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Walters |first=Damien Angelica |authorlink=Damien Angelica Walters |title=The Serial Killer's Astronaut Daughter |magazine=[[Strange Horizons]] |url=http://www.strangehorizons.com/2014/20140106/Astronaut-f.shtml |date=January 6, 2014 |accessdate=August 26, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Unnamed astronaut
|''Uprooted'' (2014), short film
|[[Space Shuttle]]
|Unknown
|-
|colspan="3"|Female astronaut on one-way journey into space.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=John Likens (Director) |year=2015 |title=Uprooted |medium=Motion picture |url=https://vimeo.com/96459171|access-date=January 7, 2016 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Kev Paciorek (USN)
|''[[Your Fathers, Where Are They? And the Prophets, Do They Live Forever?]]'' (2014), novel
|[[NASA]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronaut kidnapped and questioned by college acquaintance.<ref>{{cite book |last=Eggers |first=Dave |authorlink=Dave Eggers |title=[[Your Fathers, Where Are They? And the Prophets, Do They Live Forever?]] |year=2014 |publisher=Alfred A. Knopf, [[McSweeney's Books]] |isbn=978-1-101-87419-6}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Yuri (no last name given)
|''[[Z Nation]]''<br />''[[List of Z Nation episodes#Season 1 (2014)|Zunami]]'' (2014), TV
|[[Soviet Union]]:{{efn|The anachronistic initials "[[СССР]]" appear on Yuri's helmet, an indication that he is a hallucination.}}<br />[[International Space Station]]<br />[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]] escape pod
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Mysterious cosmonaut arrives at [[Z Nation#Main|Citizen Z]]'s outpost, but turns out to be an [[asphyxia]]-induced hallucination.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.syfy.com/znation/episodes/season/1/episode/8/zunami |title=Z Nation Recap – Zunami |publisher=Syfy |year=2015 |accessdate=May 31, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Cal Bennett, Cmdr. (USN)
|"[[Jack McDevitt|Excalibur]]" (2015), short story
|[[NASA]]
|Late 2000s
|-
|colspan="3"|Retired astronaut discusses secret NASA program with journalist.<ref>{{cite book |last=McDevitt |first=Jack |chapter=Excalibur |title=Mission: Tomorrow|editor-last=Schmidt|editor-first=Bryan Thomas |publisher=Baen Books |year=2015 |pages=17–27 |isbn=978-1-4767-8094-8}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Theo Cooper, Capt. (Commander)<br />Cole Dvorak (Engineer)<br />Bug Kieslowski (Life Systems)<br />Emily McTeer, Dr. (Physician)
|''[[400 Days (film)|400 Days]]'' (2015), film
|Kepler Industries:<br />400 Days
|Contemporary/Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronaut hopefuls on simulated 400-day mission.
|-
|rowspan="2"|International Space Station:<br />Vitaly Simakov<br />Gennady (no last name given)<br />Rick Farmer, Col. (Ph.D.) (USAF)<br /><br />Tiangong-3:<br />Huan Zhou, Lt. Col./Col. (Commander)<br />Chang Lu, Maj. ([[Chinese Air Force]])<br />Sheng Hu<br />Two unnamed taikonauts<br /><br />''Tallyho'':<br />Sir Aeric K. Cavendish (call sign Zorro) (Captain)<br />Aaron Best (Commando)<br />Hook (Commando)<br />Hugger (Commando)<br />Tick (Commando)
|''[[P. W. Singer#Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War|Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War]]'' (2015), novel
|[[International Space Station]]<br /><br />[[Tiangong-3]]<br /><br />''Tallyho'' (formerly named ''Virgin Galactic 3'') ([[single-stage-to-orbit]] [[spaceplane]])
|Near Future (c. 2020s)
|-
|colspan="3"|Space station crews are in orbit at outbreak of World War III between China, Russia and United States. ''Tallyho'' crew captures Tiangong-3 on [[privateer]] mission.<ref>{{cite book |title=Ghost Fleet |last1=Singer |first1=P. W. |authorlink1=P. W. Singer |last2=Cole |first2=August |publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-544-14284-8}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Clarence "Biff" Barnes, Capt./Maj. (USAF) (Mission Commander)<br />Ray McConnell (Flight Engineer/Second-in-command)<br />Jim Scarelli (Pilot)<br />Steve Skeldon, Capt. (USMC) (Navigator/Co-pilot)<br />Andre Baker, Capt. (USAF) (Weapons Officer)<br />Sue Tillman, Lt. (USN) (Sensor Officer)
|''[[Larry Bond|Lash-Up]]'' (2015), novel
|U.S. Space Force:<br />USS ''Defender'' (modified ''[[VentureStar]]'') ([[single-stage-to-orbit]] [[spaceplane]])
|September 16, 2017 – March 15, 2018
|-
|colspan="3"|Expansion of 2001 novella (q.v.). ''Defender'' launches on December 15, 2017.<ref>{{cite book |title=Lash-Up |last=Bond |first=Larry |others=With Chris Carlson |publisher=Forge |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-7653-3491-6}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Miller
|''[[The Last Man on Earth (TV series)|The Last Man on Earth]]''<br />''[[The Last Man on Earth (TV series)#Episodes|Screw the Moon]]'' (2015), TV
|[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Phil Miller's brother, a [[NASA]] astronaut, is stranded on space station.<ref>{{cite episode |url=http://www.fox.com/watch/438006339544/7684520448 |last1=Durbin |first1=Erik |last2=Solomon |first2=John |authorlink2=John Solomon (writer) |title=Screw the Moon |series=[[The Last Man on Earth (TV series)|The Last Man on Earth]] |season=1 |number=12 |date=May 3, 2015 |network=Fox Broadcasting Company |accessdate=May 28, 2015}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Tom Major<br />Matt Mason<br />Stylo, Lt. Col.<br />Caissier, Maj.<br /><br />''Independence'':<br />Gilbert Grayson Shepard, Col.<br />Finley Alan "Fin" Shepard<br />April Dawn Wexler Shepard
|''[[Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!]]'' (2015), TV movie<br /><br />''[[Sharknado: The 4th Awakens]]'' (2016), TV movie
|[[NASA]]:<br />[[Space Shuttle]]<br />''Independence''<br /><br />Astro-X
|Contemporary<br /><br />Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Col. Shepard, a former astronaut who never flew in space, takes secret military shuttle into orbit with his son and daughter-in-law to destroy sharknados. He is later rescued from the Moon by unnamed Astro-X astronauts.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://moria.co.nz/horror/sharknado-3-oh-hell-no-2015.htm |title=Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No! (2015) |last=Scheib |first=Richard |work=Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |accessdate=April 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://moria.co.nz/horror/sharknado-the-4th-awakens-2016.htm |title=Sharknado: The 4th Awakens (2016) |last=Scheib |first=Richard |work=Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |accessdate=September 7, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Miller (Ph.D.)<br /><br />International Space Station:<br />Unnamed commander<br />Meg (Ph.D.)<br />Unnamed Russian cosmonauts
|"Space" (2015), short story
|[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|"Manager astronaut" Miller cheats on Meg, his wife, while she is in space.<ref>{{cite book |last=Czyzniejewski |first=Michael |authorlink=Michael Czyzniejewski |chapter=Space |pages=78–85 |title=I Will Love You For the Rest of My Life |year=2015 |publisher=Curbside Splendor Publishing |isbn=978-1-94-043028-7}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Mikhail "Misha" Yurgevich (Retired cosmonaut)<br /><br />[[NASA]]:<br />Philippa "Phil"{{efn|Also known as "Iron Gut".}} Carson, Ph.D.<br />Unnamed [[ASCAN]]s
|''All Fixed Up'' (2016), novel
|[[International Space Station]]
|Contemporary (December)
|-
|colspan="3"|Carson is slated for mission to conceive a child in space.<ref>{{cite book |title=All Fixed Up |last=Grimes |first=Linda |authorlink=Linda Grimes |publisher=Tor Books |year=2016 |isbn=978-0-7653-7639-8}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Space Shuttle:<br />Jenny<br />Chen<br />Kim (no last names given)<br /><br />Space station:<br />Two unnamed astronauts
|''Busy People: Astronaut'' (2016), picture book
|[[Space Shuttle]]<br />[[Space station]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Typical space-station mission.<ref>{{cite book |last=George |first=Lucy M. |others=Pictures by AndoTwin |title=Astronaut |series=Busy People |year=2016 |publisher=QEB Publishing |isbn=978-1-60992-941-1}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|''Infinity'':<br />Ruth Christmas, Dr. (US) (Chief of biomedical problems)<br />Cosmonaut X<br />Jane<br />Uree<br />Three unnamed crewmembers<br /><br />Self-sufficient mission:<br />Ruth Christmas, Dr.<br />Two unnamed astronauts
|''Cosmic Hotel'' (2016), novel
|''Infinity'' ([[space station]])<br />Emergency pod<br /><br />Self-sufficient mission
|Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Pregnant astronaut Christmas makes emergency reentry after space station crew begins experiencing panic attacks. Christmas later joins private mission of indefinite duration aboard "self-sufficient craft".<ref>{{cite book |title=Cosmic Hotel |last=Franklin |first=Russ |authorlink=Russ Franklin |publisher=[[Soft Skull Press]] |year=2016 |isbn=978-1-59376-641-2}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|James (Station Commander) (USA) (no last name given)<br />Unnamed American astronaut<br />Unnamed Japanese astronaut<br />Lev Krupin (Russia)<br />Two unnamed Russian cosmonauts
|''[[Madam Secretary (TV series)|Madam Secretary]]''<br />''[[List of Madam Secretary episodes#Season 2 (2015–16)|Unity Node]]'' (2016), TV
|[[International Space Station]]<br />[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]]
|Contemporary (December)
|-
|colspan="3"|ISS is damaged by exploding North Korean satellite, trapping three astronauts in [[Kibo (ISS module)|Kibo]] module.<ref>{{cite episode |url=http://www.cbs.com/shows/madam-secretary/video/E6554A2E-B907-4C62-8BBB-2863AB4BF6A5/madam-secretary-unity-node/ |last=Ward |first=Matt |title=Unity Node |series=[[Madam Secretary (TV series)|Madam Secretary]] |season=2 |number=11 |date=January 10, 2016 |network=CBS |via=CBS Interactive |accessdate=January 11, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Svetlana Petrova, Capt.<br />Ekaterina Solovyeva, Capt.
|''Matryoshka'' (2016), short film
|[[Soyuz programme|Soyuz]]<br />''Soyuz-Matryoshka''
|1983
|-
|colspan="3"|In 1983, the Soviet Union launches a routine Soyuz mission, crewed by two female cosmonauts. Once in orbit, the mission runs into serious problems which leave the crew facing a series of life or death decisions and the possibility that they may not be able to return to Earth.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.matryoshka.space/ |title=MATRYOSHKA |publisher=frankapilla.com |accessdate=April 11, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|[[Walter O'Brien (character)|Walter "Walt" O'Brien]] (Scorpion)
|''[[Scorpion (TV series)|Scorpion]]''<br />''[[List of Scorpion episodes#Season 3 (2016)|It Isn't the Fall That Kills You]]'' (2016), TV
|Richard Elia Aerospace Division:<br />Vessel XA42p
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Computer genius is accidentally launched into space due to lightning strike.<ref>{{cite episode |url=http://www.cbs.com/shows/scorpion/video/D4B4D86C-1791-68CE-27E7-9B6DBB7341CC/scorpion-it-isn-t-the-fall-that-kills-you/ |last1=Sullivan |first1=Scott |last2=Santora |first2=Nick |authorlink2=Nick Santora |title=It Isn't the Fall That Kills You |series=[[Scorpion (TV series)|Scorpion]] |season=3 |number=3 |date=October 10, 2016 |network=CBS |via=CBS Interactive |accessdate=October 13, 2016}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Test flights<br />Crew #1:<br />Joseph Kess, Ph.D. (Pilot)<br />Yuri Pelsin, Dr. (Russia) (Pilot)<br /><br />Crew #2:<br />Turner Walker (USAF) (Pilot)<br />Max Biggs (USAF) (Pilot)<br /><br />Trainees:<br />James ([[United States Navy SEAL]])<br />Wallace (United States Navy SEAL)<br />Jonah Melo (United States Navy SEAL)<br />Nyambi ([[:wikt:mononym|mononym]]) (unnamed African country)<br />Six unnamed candidates<br /><br />Orbital flight:<br />Bennett Oscar "Boss" Sheraton, Capt. (United States Navy SEAL) (Pilot)
|''[[Anne Elizabeth|The Soul of a SEAL]]'' (2016), novel
|Warren Shuttle ([[spaceplane]])
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Sheraton pilots secret shuttle to deploy communications satellite and laser array.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Soul of a SEAL |last=Elizabeth |first=Anne |authorlink=Anne Elizabeth |publisher=[[Sourcebooks Casablanca]] |year=2016 |isbn=978-1-4926-2224-6}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Four unnamed astronauts
|''Take My Heart Away'' (2016), music video
|South African Aerospace Corporation:<br />[[Space Shuttle]]
|Contemporary/Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|Child plans to stow away on first African space shuttle.<ref>{{cite AV media |people= |date=June 29, 2016 |title=Johnny Clegg & Savuka - Take My Heart Away (High Society Remix) |medium=Music video |language= |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lL4_flXbHhs|access-date=July 17, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Ekaterina "Kat" Golovkina (Russia) (Commander)<br />Rory Adams (US) (Flight Engineer)<br />Hugh Derry, Dr. (UK) (Exobiologist)<br />David A. Jordan, Dr. (US) (Mission Specialist)<br />Sho Murakami (Japan)<br />Miranda North, Dr. (UK) ([[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]]) (Quarantine Officer)
|''[[Life (2017 film)|Life]]'' (2017), film
|[[International Space Station]] (Mars Pilgrim 7 Mission)<br />[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]]<br />Lifeboat A<br />Lifeboat B
|Contemporary/Near Future
|-
|colspan="3"|ISS astronauts analyze life-form brought back by Mars sample return mission.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://moria.co.nz/sciencefiction/life-2017.htm |title=Life (2017) |last=Scheib |first=Richard |work=Moria Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |date=June 10, 2017 |accessdate=June 15, 2017}}</ref>
|-
|rowspan="2"|Samuel Johnson (Commander)<br />Candice (Medic Officer)<br />Darren<br />Jerry<br />Shona
|''The Pull'' (2017), ''The Pull Expanse'' (2017), short films
|[[Space Shuttle]]<br />''Voyager 707''<br /><br />[[International Space Station]]<br /><br />[[Soyuz (spacecraft)|Soyuz]]
|Contemporary
|-
|colspan="3"|Astronaut Candice vanishes, then reappears, during spacewalk outside ISS. The same crew later returns to orbit when constellation [[Cassiopeia (constellation)|Cassiopeia]] and nebula begin moving towards Earth.<ref>{{cite AV media |people=Coreetta Buchan (Writer/Director) |year=2017 |title=The Pull |medium=Motion picture |url=https://player.vimeo.com/video/202388566|access-date=May 16, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref><ref>{{cite AV media |people=Coreetta Buchan (Writer/Director) |year=2017 |title=The Pull Expanse |medium=Motion picture |url=https://vimeo.com/213339511|access-date=May 16, 2017 |format= |time= |location= |publisher= |id= |ref=}}</ref>
|}


==Futuristic==
==Futuristic==

Revision as of 20:29, 27 November 2017

Actor William Lundigan as Col. Edward McCauley, Men into Space (TV series)

These are a series of incomplete lists of fictional astronauts appearing in various media, including books, film, television shows (live or animated), radio shows, records, and comic books.

To be included in these lists, a fictional astronaut must be modeled upon actual astronauts of real-world space programs, as they have actually existed since the beginning of the Space Age, or were envisioned in the years leading up to the Space Age. Criteria include:

  1. A fictional astronaut must be human (not an alien, robot, or animal).
  2. A fictional astronaut must be on a flight originating from the Earth; space travellers engaging in casual voyages between other planets (as in Star Wars or Battlestar Galactica) are not eligible.
  3. A fictional astronaut must be presented as living in the period of the early exploration of space, i.e. from the beginning of the Space Age to the present, and for a few decades into the future; currently, in the period of about 1960–2060.
  4. A fictional astronaut is preferably part of a real space program, like NASA or the Soviet/Russian space program, or fictional knockoffs of the same (e.g. ANSA, IASA).
  5. A fictional astronaut preferably uses space travel technology within the realm of the possible. Preference should be given to astronauts depicted using real technology (e.g. Apollo, Soyuz, Space Shuttle) or close fictional knockoffs of the same.

Fictional astronauts

Due to the length of this list, it has been divided into the following sections:

Early period

Classic period

Modern period

Futuristic

To infinity and beyond

Futuristic

Astronauts on lunar bases, performing interplanetary travel, and other feats not yet achieved.

Moon

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
United States:
Edward "Ed"[a] McCauley, Col.
Joseph "Joe" Hale, Maj. (Communications Officer)
Renza Hale
Billy Williams, Maj. (Navigational Officer)
Patrick Donon, Maj.
Mason Trett, Maj.
Russ Russell, Dr. (Scientist)
George Gould, Col.
Jeffrey Tuttle, Capt.
Kenneth Moresby, Capt.
Rick Gordon, Lt.
Frank Werner, Lt.
Hal Roberts, Capt.
Hargaves, Lt.
Tom Farrow, Capt. (Radioman)
Robbins, Capt.
Brugle
Peter Riber, Dr.
Fadden
Dan Freer, Capt. (Spacecraft commander)
Charles Cooper, Dr. (Biologist)
Neil Templeton, Lt. (Navigator)
Dobbs, Lt.
Pat Warren, Lt.
Johnny Baker, Lt.
Hardy Stockman, Maj.
Markey, Maj.
Oliver Farrar, Prof. (Astronomer)
Jim Nichols (Astronomer)[b]
Warnecke, Maj. (Dr.) (Physician)
Teal, Lt.
Adams, Col.
Bob Kelly, Lt.
Prescott, Dr. (Scientist)
David Orrin, Dr. (Scientist)
Denny, Lt.
Rowland Kennedy, Dr. (Scientist)
Doug Bowers, Capt.
John Arnold, Maj.
Jimmy Manx (Reporter)
Paul Carlson (Reporter)
Gorman, Lt.
Harold Carter, Dr. (Scientist)
Perry Holcomb, Dr. (Scientist)
Van Fleet, Capt.
Narry, Dr. (Mineralogist)
Bromfield, Dr. (Scientist)
Rice, Dr. (Scientist)
Orr, Dr. (Scientist)
Stubblefield, Maj.
Jim Blythe, Maj.
Bernard Bush, Dr. (Scientist)
George Coldwell, Dr. (Scientist)
Guthrie Durlock, Dr. (Scientist)
Walker, Lt.
Kyle Rennish, Capt. (Photographer)
Rudy Manton, Lt.
McIntyre, Maj.
Charles "Charlie" Randolph, Maj.
John Leonard, Lt.
Ingram, Maj.
Tom Jackson, Maj. (Spacecraft commander)
Henry, Capt.
Parker, Dr. (Geologist)
Richard "Dick" Jackson, Capt.
Rumbough, Capt.
Marlowe, Capt.
Webb, Capt. (Radio Operator)
Don Miller, Capt.
Tim O'Leary, Maj.
Frank Bartlett, Col.
Tucker, Sgt.
Vic Enright, Maj.
Others

Russia:
Tolchek, Col. (Moon base commander)
Gulyt, Maj.
Kralenko, Maj. (NK-1 commander)
Alexandrov, Col.
Others
Men into Space (1959–60), TV United States Air Force:
Various missions

Russia:
Moon base
NK-1
c. 1970–1980
Future astronauts on Moon missions and Moon base crews.[1][2]
Aerobee:
Ed McCauley, 1st Lt.
Randy (alternate)

X-21:
Ed McCauley, Maj. (Pilot)
Furness, Maj. (Observer)

Space Platform:
Ed McCauley, Maj. (Commander)
Randy Hall, Capt.
Sammy Breen, 2nd Lt.

Grimaldi Base:
Ed McCauley, Col. (Base Commander)
Holmes
Kent
Unnamed communications officer
2 other crewmembers

Venus ship:
Ed McCauley, Col. (Commander)
Randy Hall, Maj. (Second-in-Command)
Bramwell, Dr. (civilian scientist)

First Martian Expedition:
Ed McCauley, Col. (Commander)
Randy Hall, Maj. (Second-in-Command)
Brett
Joe Fallon (impersonating Andrew Fallon) (Mechanic)
Hathaway (Meteorologist)
Soames
Men into Space (1960), novel Space Service (United States):
Aerobee (suborbital rocket)
X-21 (spaceplane)
Space Platform
Grimaldi Base (moonbase)
Venus ship
First Martian Expedition
c. 1960–1980[c]
Tie-in novel based on TV series of same name but featuring original stories. McCauley makes first manned spaceflight aboard Aerobee and first orbital spaceplane flight in X-21. First Martian Expedition lands on Eros to refuel en route to Mars.[3]
Rog Everett
Willie Sanger
"Contact" (1960), short short story Observatory No. 1 Future
Moon-based observers unknowingly witness end of life on Mars.[4]
Unnamed commander
Unnamed astronauts
"Report on the Nature of the Lunar Surface" (1960), short short story Project Diana:
Moonbase One
Near Future
First astronauts on the Moon discover contamination of lunar surface by earlier unmanned spacecraft.[5]
John Anderson, Capt. (US)
Sigrid Bromark, Dr. (Sweden)
Selim Hamid, Dr. (Turkey)
Erik Heinrich, Dr. (Germany)
Hideko Murata, Dr. (Physician) (Japan)
Asmara Makonnen, Dr. (Nigeria)
Etienne Martel, Dr. (France)
Robert "Roddy" Murdock
Feodor Orloff, Dr. (Russia)
Sir William Rochester, Dr. (UK)
David Ruskin, Dr. (Israel)
Luis Vargas, Dr. (Brazil)
12 to the Moon (1960), film International Space Order:
Lunar Eagle
Future
First manned Moon mission is international project.[6][7]
Perry Rhodan, Maj.
Reginald Bell, Capt.
Clark G. Fletcher, Capt.
Eric Manoli, Lt.
Mike Bull (names from the US-English translation)
Perry Rhodan series (1961–present), novellas, comics, audiobooks, film Enterprise Stardust 1971
The astronauts are members of the United States Space Force (USSF) and their mission is the first landing on the moon – where they find a marooned alien space ship and its crew.[8]
Multi-national astronauts

Joseph Cavor
Katherine "Kate" Callender
Arnold Bedford
First Men in the Moon (1964), film UN 1 (spacecraft)

Cavorite sphere
1960s

Flashback to 1899
UN crew on Moon discover evidence of 19th-century British lunar expedition. Aged survivor Bedford tells what occurred.[9]
Lee Stocker, Gen. (Commander)
Clint Anderson, Maj.
Diana Brice, Prof.
Phillip Mendl, Dr.
Ernie Travers, Lt.
The Outer Limits
Moonstone (1964), TV
Lunar Expedition One Near Future
Moonbase crew make contact with alien fugitives.[10]
Gompert (Commander)
Dufresne
"Yo" Johannsen
Donald Barnard "Don" Merriam, Lt.
The Wanderer (1964), novel U.S. Space Force
Moon Project:
Moonbase, U.S.
Three rocket ships ("Baba Yagas")
Near Future
Astronauts at moonbase in crater Plato when artificial planet emerges from hyperspace into Earth orbit.[11]
Lavinia Pickerell

Cow:
Unnamed captain
Thurston Williston (Co-pilot/Navigator)
Two unnamed crewmembers

Lunar Base:
M. M. Manborough (Base Commander)
Finch, Maj.
Foster Esticott, Lt. (Selenodetic survey)
Guffey, Dr. (Microbiologist)
Rugby (Cafeteria/Supply room)
Unnamed Lunar Patrol Officer
Unnamed personnel
Miss Pickerell on the Moon (1965), novel Space Force (Moon Force):
Cargo Spaceship No. 00-41-233 (Cow)
Space Force Lunar Base (Moonport)
Rocketcraft No. 12-12-22
Mooncraft No. 1
Near Future
Miss Pickerell travels to Moon to find antibiotic for animal epidemic. Landing site in Descartes; lunar base in Mare Cognitum. Sequel to Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars (q.v.).[12]
Link Day (Commander)
Mike Capoferri, Dr.
Terry Holmes, Dr. (Linguist)
Carlos (no last name given)
26 unnamed astronauts
"Wrong Way Street" (1965), short story United Nations:
UN Flight Four
1989
While investigating alien base and spacecraft on Moon, scientist Capoferri accidentally travels back in time. Walnikov is mentioned as the first human on Mars.[13]
Sirius (USAF):
Davis
Acton (Last names not given)

Space Station One: 'Santa Fe' :
Felix Coulter, Dr. (Director)
Unnamed US astronauts

Little Bear:
Melvin K. Green (V-POTUS)
Hunter-Killer (1966), novel Sirius

Space Station One: Santa Fe

Little Bear
Alternate 1970s
After the Air Force sends two men to the moon but fails to bring them back safely, the Navy decides to upstage them by sending the Vice-President into orbit using an uprated Polaris missile.[14]
Schmidlap (US)
Hoffman (US)
Peter "Pete" Mattemore (US)
Eileen Forbes (US)

Igor Valkleinokov (USSR)
Anna Soblova (USSR)
Way...Way Out (1966), film Unknown 1989
US sends a married couple to live on the moon and operate a weather station close to a nearby Soviet lunar base. Couples have a space race to see who will have the first "moon baby".[15]
Project Settlement:
Perkins, Cmdr.
Unnamed crew

Project Rescue:
Steve (no last name given)
Unnamed crew
Night Gallery
The Nature of the Enemy (1970), TV
U.S. Department of Space:
Project Settlement
Project Rescue
Near Future
Astronaut on rescue mission discovers giant mousetrap on the Moon.[16]
Clarence "Clancy" Ballou
Jack
Roger (no last names given for last two)
"Now I'm Watching Roger" (1972), short story Unknown Future
Interpersonal tensions among astronauts on moonbase.[17]
Siren II:
Stan Bailey[d]

Miroslava Space Detachment:[e]
Natasha
Olga
Lyudmilla
Tanya
Unnamed female cosmonauts
Two unnamed male cosmonauts
The Moonlovers: An Erotic Space Odyssey (1975), novel Unknown
Siren II

Soviet Lunar Colony
Near future[f]
NASA astronaut whose long-duration Earth orbital mission is suddenly endangered when a mysterious force pulls his spacecraft towards the Moon. The ending hints that the story may be a dream.[18]
Moonbase Sinus Medii
Ed Speedwell, Capt (Commander)
Ivan Flyenov, Capt (2nd in Command)
Jerry Owyee, Lt (3rd in Command)
Rocky Rhodes, Lt.
Harold Cummings, Dr.
Irene Stone, Dr.
Lois White, Dr.
Mike O'Riley
Unnamed astronauts

Moon Orbiting Space Station 1
Six unnamed astronauts

Moon Orbiting Space Station 2
Yuri Chisodva, Capt.
Five unnamed astronauts

Aristotle
Dick Peterson, Capt.
Unnamed astronauts

Agamemnon
Ed Speedwell, Capt.
Jean Chelsea-Smith, Lt. (RAF)
Peter Chorosous
Class G-Zero (1976?), novel Moonbase
Sinus Medii

Space Station
Skylab V
Moon Orbiting Space Station 1
Moon Orbiting Space Station 2

Space Shuttles:
Orbiter 8
Orbiter 10

Nuclear Lunar Shuttles:
Aristotle
Agamemnon
Near Future (Alternate 1990s?)
Astronauts of the International Space Agency (ISA) who find themselves dealing with a first contact situation.[19]
NASA:
Douglas Cummings
Don Wayne

Wehrmacht:
Franz Bethwig
Vengeance 10 (1980), novel Unknown

V-10
May 6, 2009, flashback to 1938–45
Two American astronauts stumble across the final remnants of Nazi Germany's Moon Program.[20]
Douglas Morgan
Lisa Morgan
Fred Simpson
Martin Kobol
William Demain
Catherine Demain
Larry LaStrande
Sylvia Dortman
Blair
Marrett
Haley (First names not given for the last three)

Other unnamed astronauts
Test of Fire (1982), novel Unknown

Space Station

Space Shuttle
Near Future
Personnel at a moonbase in the crater Alphonsus which becomes the last outpost of civilization when the Earth is devastated by a massive solar flare and the nuclear strikes it triggers. Revision of When the Sky Burned (1972).[21]
US

Jersey Colony
Eli Steinmetz
Willie Shea
Kurt Perry, Dr.
Dawson (First name not given)
Gallagher (First name not given)
Cooper (First name not given)
Snyder (First name not given)
Russell (First name not given)
Two unnamed astronauts

Columbus
Jack Sherman, Cmdr.
Unnamed astronauts

Gettysberg
Dave Jurgens, Cmdr.
Carl Burkhart, Co-Pilot
Unnamed Mission Specialists

USSR

Selenos 4
Three unnamed cosmonauts

Selenos 5
Three unnamed cosmonauts

Selenos 6
Three unnamed cosmonauts

Selenos 8
(FKA)
Two unnamed cosmonauts
(Soviet Army)
Grigory Leuchenko, Maj.
Dmitry Petrov, Lt.
Ivan Ostrovski, Sgt.
Mikhail Yuschuk, Cpl.
Unnamed corporal
Cyclops (1986), novel Cosmos Luna
Selenos 4-6 & 8

Moonbase
Jersey Colony

Space Station
Columbus

Space Shuttle
Gettysberg
Near Future
The actions of members of an illegal lunar colony cause a crisis between the United States and the Soviet Union. Mention is made in the novel of Salyuts 9 and 10.[22]
Wolfgang "Wolfli" Hitler (born Wolfgang Tshurkurka) "Reichs-Peace" (1986), short story Nazi Germany:
Mondexpedition
1980s (Alternate History)
Adolf Hitler's adopted Romany son is endangered by sunspot activity while away from moon base.[23]
Andy
Phil

Molly Brown:
Kathy (Commander)
Peter (Ph.D.) (Science officer) (No last names given)
Space Station Friendship: A Visit with the Crew in 2007 (1988), novel Project Willow Stick:
Molly Brown (Orbital transfer vehicle [OTV])
2007 (Autumn)
NASA astronauts exploring Scott Crater. Kathy and Peter are husband and wife.[24]
Europa:
Silvia Rabal (Spain) (Pilot)
Marco Albertosi (Italy)

Landing module:
Marte Schierbeck (Denmark) (Module pilot)
Dieter Kaufmann (Germany)
Emile Lemarque (France)
Kevin O'Meara (Air Force) (Ireland)
Adriaan van der Heyde (Netherlands)

Giuseppe Serena (Italy) (Alternate)

Lunar Village:
Unnamed Commander (Astrophysicist)
Ed Druson, Col. (Head of Security)
Unnamed pod pilot
Unnamed personnel

Lunar shuttle:
Peter Pascoe (UK Commissioner, Eurofed Justice Department)
Andrew "Andy" Dalziel (Detective Superintendent, ret.)
One Small Step (1990), novella Federated States of Europe
Federal Space Programme:
Europa
Landing module

United States:
Lunar Village
Lunar shuttle
May 2010[g]
At the moment he becomes the first European on the lunar surface, Lemarque is killed by short circuit in his urine collection device; Dalziel and Pascoe investigate. European landing on May 14, 2010.[25]
Moonshadow:
Patricia Jay "Trish" Mulligan
Sanjiv
Theresa (no last names given)

Rescuer:
Stanley (Mission Commander) (no first name given)
Tanya Nakora
"A Walk in the Sun" (1991), short story Moonshadow
Rescuer
Future
After Moonshadow crash-lands during Moon orbit mission, sole survivor Mulligan walks all the way around the Moon to remain in sunlight while awaiting rescue. Crash site near edge of Mare Smythii.[26][27]
Two unnamed astronauts Kyoryu Sentai Zyuranger
Birth (1992), TV

(adapted as
Mighty Morphin Power Rangers
Day of the Dumpster (1993), TV)
Space Shuttle Contemporary
Astronauts accidentally release sorceress Witch Bandora (Rita Repulsa in American version) from 10,000-year imprisonment on Moon.[h]
Dmitri (no last name given) Dmitri the Astronaut (1996), picture book Unknown (United States) Contemporary/Near Future (October – Thanksgiving)
Astronaut returns to Earth after two and a half years on the Moon to find that no one remembers him.[28]
Chris Terence, Dr. (USA) (Commander)
Xiao Be (China) (Pilot)
Peter Mikhailovich Denisov (Russia) (Engineer)
Jiang Wu (China)
Encounter with Tiber (1996), novel Tiber Two
Tiber Prize
(modified Apollo IIs)
2010
Mission to retrieve alien technology from lunar south pole ends in tragedy.[29]
Constitution:
Edward A. Graham, Jr., Cmdr. (Co-Pilot)
Casey Hamilton, Lt. (Flight Engineer)
Kenneth A. Moore, Lt. (Flight Mechanic)
Richard Dunning, Sgt. (Mission Specialist)
Walter Kahn, Dr. (Flight Surgeon)

Space Station One:
Chet Aldridge, Gen. (USSF) (Commander)
Tom "Tommy" Sidwell

Luna Two:
Eugene M. "Gene" Parnell (Commander)
Joseph K. "Joe" Laughlin
Eight unnamed astronauts

Sanger XS-1:
Karl Schiller, Col. (West Germany)

Constellation:
P. A. Kingsolver, Capt. (Pilot)
H. M. Trombly, Lt. Cmdr. (Co-Pilot)

Conestoga:
Gene Parnell, Cmdr. (Commander)
Cristine September "Cris" Ryer, Capt. (USAF) (Pilot)
Jay Lewitt, Lt. (Flight Engineer)
Cecil Orvitz (impersonating Paul Aaron Dooley) (Computer programmer)
Berkley Rhodes (Reporter)
Alex Bromleigh (Cameraman/Producer)

Koenig Selenen GmbH:
James Patrick "Pat" Leamore (Executive Vice-President)
Uwe Aachener (Astronaut-Candidate)
Markus Talsbach (Astronaut-Candidate)

Harpers Ferry:
Curtis "Dr. Z" Zimm (Pilot)

Space Station One:
Joseph K. "Old Joe" Laughlin, Cdre. (USN) (Commander)
Frierson, Lt. j.g. (NASA)
Hollis, Lt. (NASA)
Unnamed personnel

Fido's Pride:
Edmund "Poppa Dog" McGraw (Pilot)
Billy

Zenith-Two:
Unnamed astronauts
The Tranquility Alternative (1996), novel United States Air Force:
U.S.S. Constitution (space ferry)

United States Space Force (USSF):
Space Station One ("the Wheel")

Luna Two (Eagle Four lander)

ESA:
Sanger XS-1 (spaceplane)

NASA:
Constellation (Atlas-C space ferry)
Space Station One
U.S.S. Conestoga (Moonship)
Harpers Ferry (space taxi)
Fido's Pride (Mars Retriever 13)
Tranquillity Base/Teal Falcon bunker

ESA:
Walter Dornberger (Sanger booster/Horus-class orbiter)

North Korea:
Zenith-Two (Ghost Rider)
April 10, 1956 (Alternate History)

1963-1966 (Alternate History)

September 1969 (Alternate History)

1977 (Alternate History)

February 16–22, 1995 (Alternate History)
In alternate history, NASA launches final Moon mission in 1995 to turn over Tranquillity Base to German company. First manned space ferry flight in 1956 commanded by Chuck Yeager. Joint US-Soviet Ares One mission lands on Mars in July 1976 with Neil Armstrong and Alexei Leonov.[i] Set in same alternate history as Steele's short stories "Goddard's People" and "John Harper Wilson" and novel V-S Day (q.v.).[30]
HayesCorp Moonship:
Ishmael Hayes
Elisabeth (no last name given)
Bennett (Security) (no first name given)

Subtropolis:
Sam Houston (Subtropolis Systems)
Jimmy
Stevie G. (Foreman)
Gene
Tobol
Aggie
Bob Hennessey
Betsy Warren
MacPherson
Unnamed personnel

Channel Seven:
Dave Archer (Reporter)
Annie "Sparky" Franklin (Segment producer)
Heck Allen (Cameraman)
Astronauts in Trouble: Live from the Moon (1999), Astronauts in Trouble: One Shot, One Beer (2000), graphic novels HayesCorp:
Moonship
Cargo One
Cargo Two
Cargo Three
Subtropolis (moonbase)

Channel Seven:
Newsvan
2019
Channel Seven reporters report on HayesCorp returning humans to the moon, only to discover that billionaire Hayes has had a secret moonbase in the Sea of Showers for five years. Hayes' moonship lands north of Cassini Crater; Newsvan lands south of Autolycus.[31]
NASA:
John Lakey (Chief of Astronaut Office)
Deborah Kimbrough
Jay Guidon (CAPCOM)
Molly Peterson (CAPCOM)

Nazarbeyev (Kazakhstan) (no first name given)

Original STS-128 crew/
Endeavour crew:
Olivia "Ollie" Grant, Col. (Ph.D.) (Commander)
Tanya Brown (Pilot)
Betsy Newell (Mission Specialist 1)
Janet Barnes (Mission Specialist 2)
Penny High Eagle (born Penelope Ingle), Ph.D. (Payload Specialist) (joins hijack crew)

Hijack crew (MEC):
Jack Medaris
Craig "Hopalong" Cassidy, Capt. (Pilot)
Virgil "Virg" Judd (Shuttle Main Engine Technician)

Soyuz-Y:
Olivia Grant
Yuri Dubrinski, Col. (RSA) (pilot)
Back to the Moon (1999), novel NASA:
Space Shuttles
Columbia (STS-128)
Endeavour

Russian Space Agency:
Soyuz-Y

Medaris Engineering Company (MEC):
Elsie
Elsie-2 (Landing Craft)
c. 2002 (July)
On its last scheduled mission, shuttle Columbia is hijacked and flown to the Moon by former NASA engineer Medaris. Cassidy is an ex-NASA astronaut who flew on all the shuttles and Mir, helped repair the Hubble Space Telescope, and commanded Spacelab XXI. Nazarbeyev was a guest cosmonaut on Mir. Moon landing near Apollo 17 landing site in Taurus-Littrow.[32]
Collins (FS-6)
Po Tseng, Col.
Jerry Cochagne
Joe DeSosa
Dick Lebby
Arminta Horo
Paul Manch
Iona Greer

Aldrin/Farside Base (FS-5)
Mike Mobley, Col.
Louise Washington
Ann Biso
Bob Faden
Frank Dryzmkowski
Shinobu Takizawa
Blood Moon (1999), novel Lunar Landing Modules
Aldrin
Collins

Moonbase
Farside
Near Future
When contact is unexpectedly lost with the first astronauts to spend a full lunar day/cycle a rescue mission is hastily launched.[33]
Michelle "Mickey" Griffith, Col. (Ph.D.) (USAF) (Commander) Astronaut (2003), play NASA:
Lunar Colony One
Near Future
Commander of lunar colony at edge of Procellarum Ocean (near 18°N 75°W / 18°N 75°W / 18; -75) gives press conference.[34]
Rachel Fine, Maj.
Ben Halberstom, Capt.
John Redding (Mission Specialist)
Earthstorm (2006), TV movie American Space Institute (ASI):
Space Shuttle
Perseus (Lunar Mission)
Contemporary/Near Future
Demolition expert Redding joins mission to stabilize Moon after asteroid impact. Perseus has experimental nuclear pulse engines.
Deke Gordon, Capt.

PASE:
Rachel Salerno, Cmdr.
Hatcher (no first name given)
Poptropica
Lunar Colony (2007-2013), online game and chapter book
Poptropica Academy of Space Exploration (PASE):
Lunar colony
Flight capsule
Lunar lander
Future
Alien artifacts are found near lunar colony. Gordon built first lunar facility decades earlier.[35]
Lloyd Nadolski, Capt. (Commander)
Caitlin Hall, Lt. (LMP)
Aldrich Coleman, Capt. (Habitat Commander)
Samuel Wilson (Space Engineer)
Peter D. Stanton (Space Engineer)
Mia Nomeland (Norway)
Midori Yoshida (Japan)
Antoine Devereux (France)
Darlah – 172 timer på månen (a.k.a. 172 Hours on the Moon) (2008), novel NASA

Ceres (Command Module), Demeter (Lunar Module)

Moonbase
DARLAH 2
April 2018 – July 2019
Teenagers Mia, Midori and Antoine win lottery to visit top-secret lunar base built in the 1970s in the Sea of Tranquility.[36]
André Gretzsin

Mare Serenitatis base:
André Gretzsin, Jr. (Commander)
Frank (no last name given)
Rachel (no last name given)
Unnamed personnel

Farside Station:
Matt Tanager (Captain)
Unnamed personnel
"Letting Go" (2008), short story Unnamed moonbase (Mare Serenitatis)
Farside Base
Gravity Train (Capsule A)
Future (21st century)
Gravity train is built linking Mare Serenitatis and Farside Base through lunar core. Frank previously flew on ISS. André Gretzsin, Jr.'s grandfather flew on Mir; his father was an astronaut killed in a training accident.[37][38]
Sam Bell Moon (2009), film Unknown Near Future
Astronaut tending an automated mining facility on the Moon's far side.[39]
China National Space Agency:
Gong Zheng

Harmony:
Hui Tian (Commander)
Ming Feng (Pilot)
Xu Guan, Dr. (Physician)
Zhi Feng (Engineer/Political Officer)

NASA:
Charles Leonard (Pilot)
Helen Menendez (Mission Specialist)
Jim England

Mercy I:
Bill Stetson (Commander/Pilot)
Anthony "Tony" Chow, M.D., Ph.D. (Mission Specialist)

Dreamscape:
Paul Gesling, Capt. (Commander/Pilot)
Passengers:
Matt Thibodeau
Maquita Singer
Sharik Mbanta
Bridget Wells
John Graves, Dr.
Back to the Moon (2010), novel China National Space Agency:
Harmony

Space Excursions:
Dreamscape (spaceplane)

NASA (Constellation Program):
Mercy I (Orion/Altair)
2020s (August)
On commercial circumlunar flight, Dreamscape picks up distress call from crashed Chinese lander Harmony on lunar service. NASA reconfigures planned Moon landing as rescue mission. Leonard and Menendez are assigned to moon landing before crew is cut back to allow taikonauts to be rescued.[40]
Marcia Beckett, US (Commander)
Yuri Petrov, Russia
Three unnamed NASA astronauts
One unnamed Russian cosmonaut
"The Cassandra Project" (2010), short story Minerva 2026
Joint US-Russian mission, first manned Moon landing since Apollo 17. Landing in Mare Maskelyne. Mission omitted in 2012 novel adaptation. Sid Myshko named as commander of earlier orbital mission.[41]
Base Diana:
Cliff Devenish, Col. (Commander)
Andrea "Andi" Carlisle, Maj.
Jim Reeve, Capt.
Marty Garrett, Capt. (Technical Officer)
Dyson, Pvt.
Downham (Soldier)
Unnamed soldiers
Charles Jackson, Prof. (Head scientist)
Liz Didbrook (Assistant scientist)
Lars Gregman (Scientist)
Phillips (Nurse)
Unnamed scientists

Apollo 23:
Pat Ashton, Lt. (CMP)
Marty Garrett, Capt.
Doctor Who
Apollo 23 (2010), novel
United States:
Base Diana

Apollo 23
Unnamed CSM/LM
Contemporary
Secret moonbase is infiltrated by alien force and cut off from Earth by sabotage of "quantum displacement" equipment. Ashton and Garrett are space shuttle veterans.[42]
NASA:
Joe Santalupo (Chief Astronaut)

Artemis 3:
Gary Hobbs
Scott Stevenson
James "Jim" Truax, Cmdr. (Ph.D.) (USN)
"Drag Queen Astronaut" (2010), short story Artemis 3 Near Future
During mission to Fra Mauro to investigate buried alien spacecraft, Truax is caught on camera wearing female undergarments in lunar orbit.[43]
Glorious March:
Ten unnamed astronauts

Magnificent Dragon:
Kwan Xiang, Maj. Gen. (Commander)
Chao, Sgt.
Ten unnamed soldiers (Chinese Air Force / Chinese Special Forces)

Ariane 1 (ESA Moon Mission 01):
Jean Marceau, Maj. (Commander)
Unnamed pilot
Unnamed copilot
Three unnamed mission specialists
Philippe Jarneux, Capt. (Commandos Marine)
Unnamed sergeant (Commandos Marine)
Two unnamed commandos (Commandos Marine)

Ariane 2:
Ten unnamed astronauts

NASA:
Harwell, Capt.

Dark Star 1:
Unnamed shuttle commander and pilot
Ten unnamed astronauts

Dark Star 2:
Unnamed shuttle commander and pilot
Ten unnamed astronauts

Dark Star 3:
Johnson (shuttle commander)
Walker (shuttle pilot)
Arthur Kendal, Col. (USAF) (Mission commander)
Maggio (Command module pilot)
Dugan, Lt. (USN) (Lunar lander pilot)
Jason Ryan, Lt. (USN/Event Group) (Lunar lander copilot/mission specialist)
Sarah McIntire, Lt. (US Army/Event Group) (Mission specialist)
Will Mendenhall, 2nd Lt. (Event Group) (Mission specialist)
Andrews, Sgt. (5th Special Forces Group)
Demarest, Sgt. (5th Special Forces Group)
Elliott (5th Special Forces Group)
Johnson (5th Special Forces Group)
Martinez, Sgt. (5th Special Forces Group)
Stanley Sampson, Sgt. (5th Special Forces Group)
Tewlewiski, Sgt. (5th Special Forces Group)

Peter the Great:
Unnamed cosmonauts
Legacy (2011), novel China National Space Administration
Chinese Lunar Exploration Program:
Glorious March (Long March 8 / Zihuang lunar lander)
Magnificent Dragon (Long March 8 / Zihuang lunar lander)

European Space Agency:

ESA Moon Mission 01 (launched by Ariane 5 1):
Bonaparte 1 (command module)
Astral (lunar lander)

Ariane 5 2

International Space Station

NASA/DARPA
Operation Dark Star:

Dark Star 1:
Space Shuttle
Discovery
Modified Orion (unnamed) / Modified Altair (Achilles 1)

Dark Star 2:
Space Shuttle
Endeavour
Modified Orion (unnamed) / Modified Altair (Thor 1)

Dark Star 3:
Space Shuttle
Atlantis
Modified Orion (Falcon 1) / Modified Altair (Yorktown)

Russian Federal Space Agency:
Peter the Great (lunar lander)
Contemporary
Nations race to recover alien weaponry and energy-producing mineral discovered in Shackleton Crater by robotic NASA rovers. Dark Star 1 command module and lander are launched by Ares I, Dark Star 2 command module and lander by Ares V, Dark Star 3 command module and lander by Atlas V[j] left over from Apollo program. Glorious March, Ariane 2, Discovery and Endeavour are destroyed after launch by ASM-135 ASATs and SA-2 Guidelines.[44]
Henry Watkins, Jr. American Dad!
National Treasure 4: Baby Franny: She's Doing Well: The Hole Story (2012), TV
Unknown Contemporary
Astronaut building space station on Moon.
Morgan "Bucky" Blackstone
Ben Gaines (Pilot)
Marcia Neimark
Phil Bassinger
The Cassandra Project (2012), novel Blackstone Enterprises
Sidney Myshko
2019
First private manned mission to Moon. Neimark and Bassinger make landing in Cassegrain Crater.[45]
Liberty:
"Sand" Sanders
James Washington (Model)

George W. Bush:
Vivian Wagner (Commander)
McLennan (Officer)
Tynan
Unnamed personnel

Nazi moonbase:
Wolfgang Kortzfleisch (Mondführer)
Klaus Adler (Oberführer, later Führer)
Richter, Dr. (Scientist)
Renate Richter (Earthologist)
Weapons NCO (unnamed)
Unnamed personnel
Iron Sky (2012), film United States:
"Liberty" (Moon Mission)
U.S.S. George W. Bush (Mars exploration ship)

Nazi Germany:
Moonbase
First Fleet:
Götterdämmerung (battleship)
Siegfried (battleship)
Tannhäuser (battleship)
Heinrich (battleship)
Biterolf (battleship)
Wolfram (battleship)
Valkyries (spacecraft)

International Space Station (European Union)

Australia:
Australian Ship Dundee 01

UK:
Spitfire

Russia:
Mir

Canada
Japan
India
South Korea
2018
American astronauts discover Nazi moonbase.[46]
George Gompers (Commander)
Tom Conrad, Lt. Cmdr. (USAF) (Pilot)
Fred Phillips, Lt. (Engineer)
Maxon Mann, Dr. (Roboticist)
Shine Shine Shine (2012), novel NASA:
Aeneid rocket
Contemporary/Near Future
NASA astronauts on mission to colonize the Moon with robots.[47]
CES-51:
Freddie Saturn (NASA)
Buddy Waters (NASA)
Damien Kweller (NASA)
Karen Jones (NASA)
Linda Cliff (NASA)
Hibito Nanba (JAXA)
Space Brothers (2012), anime (based on the 2007 manga of the same name) NASA:
Orion
Altair
Lunar base
2026
A crew of astronauts, including the first Japanese astronaut to walk on the Moon (Hibito), launch on an expedition to a lunar base.[48]
SRP:
Sztab, Capt. (no first name given)

CASA:
Ken Arluk
Richter "Rich" Front

Maurice:
Drake Matter (Pilot)
Wendy Byrd (Co-pilot)
Crater XV (2013), graphic novel Siberian Rocket Program (SRP)

Canadian Arctic Space Agency (CASA):
Maurice (railgun)
c. 1987
CASA was established in the 1960s but dissolved after a year. Twenty years later, reunited CASA engineers launch Maurice on one-way flight to the moon, with 15-year-old Byrd as co-pilot. Sztab's SRP mission was canceled.[49]
Mike Rodriguez, Cmdr. (USN) (Pilot)
Davis
O'Neil (no first names given)

Dale (Backup/CAPCOM) (no last name given)
"The Irish Astronaut" (2013), short story NASA:
Aquarius
Near Future
After Aquarius disintegrates on return to Earth from the Moon, Dale brings Rodriguez' remains to County Clare in Ireland. Rodriguez was a member of NASA Astronaut Group 19.[50][51]
Janet Greenway (Commander)
Gary Schroder
Ashley Sutton
Raj
Susie
Jeb[k]
The Resurrection of Ritara (2013), novel NASA:
Diana 4
c. 2008[l]
Crew of the fourth mission in a series of eight planned to renew humanity's exploration of the Moon who disappear along with their spacecraft as it passes behind the Moon.[52]
Moonbase ARK:
Gerard Brauchman, Col. (Commander)
Ava Cameron, Lt.
Bruce Johns (Senior Engineer)
Lance "Doc" Krauss, Dr. (Physician)
Stranded (2013), film United States:
Moonbase ARK (Mineral Exploration Camp)
USS Magellan (rescue shuttle)
April 8–9, 2027
Astronauts on mining moonbase infested by alien spores after meteor shower.[53]
Unnamed (Narrator)
Anna (no last name given)
MDash
Steve Wong
"Alan Bean Plus Four" (2014), short story Alan Bean (Command Module) July–September 2014
Four friends fly around Moon in privately built spacecraft purchased from widow of pool-supply businessman.[54]
Lundvik (Captain)
Duke
Henry
Doctor Who
Kill the Moon (2014), TV
Space Shuttle 2049
Space shuttle crew travels to Moon, which is mysteriously gaining mass, endangering life on Earth. Landing near Mare Fecunditatis.[55]
Cooper P mine:
Brian Thorpe
Unnamed personnel

Orion/Surety:
Randy Johnston (lander pilot)
Colin Bertelli
Suze Baldwin (Orion pilot)
"Low Arc" (2014), short story Cooper P mine (Australia)

NASA:
Orion
Surety (lunar lander)
Future (21st century)
Former lunar ice miner Bertelli confronts emergency on NASA science mission to Schrödinger Basin.[56][57]
Harley Mathews, Maj. (USAF) (Pilot)
Herman Hawthorne
"The Man On The Moon" (2014), short story Unknown Contemporary
Former NASA astronaut Mathews flies billionaire Hawthorne to the moon in space capsule resembling log cabin.[58]
Hunter Donovan (USN) (Geologist)

Phoenix 2:
Franklin "Frank" Wilson, Lt. Col. (USMC) (Commander)
Two unnamed astronauts

Phoenix 5:
Furlong
Mongillo (no first names given)
Sydney "Syd" Weaver, Lt. (USN) (call sign Blackfox) (Command Module Pilot)

Phoenix 6:
Yuen Bai, Cmdr. (PLA Air Force) (Co-Commander)
Franklin Wilson, Lt. Col. (Co-Commander)
Anthony "Benny" Benevisto, Lt. Cmdr. (USN) (Command Module Pilot/Tech Support)
Thomas "Moose" Mosensen, Lt. Cmdr. (USN) (Co-CM Pilot)
Yeoh "Bruce" Kong-sang, Dr. (Prof.) (China) (Tech Support)
Alan H. Donovan, Dr. (US) (Archeologist)
Elias Zell, Dr. (UK) (Archeologist)
Soong Yang Zi, Dr. (China) (Forensic Anthropologist)
Ocean of Storms (2016), novel China:
Shenzhou

NASA
Phoenix program (Constellation-like):
Phoenix 1
Phoenix 2
Phoenix 3 (command modules only)
Phoenix 4
Phoenix 5

Phoenix 6:
Tai-Ping ("Great Peace") (Shenzhou) (CM)/Copernicus (LM)
Near Future (December 22 – October 7)
Electromagnetic pulse emanates from artifact buried under Ocean of Storms; NASA undertakes joint Phoenix 6 mission with China after Phoenix 5 launch failure. Wilson and Mosensen are ISS veterans. Hunter Donovan, Alan Donovan's father, was a geologist selected for the Apollo program who never flew due to heart fibrillation.[59]

"Counter-Earth"

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
EUROSEC:
Borgener
Mitchell (no first names given)

Phoenix:
Glenn D. Ross, Col. (NASA)
John Kane, Dr. (UK) (Astrophysicist)
Doppelgänger (aka Journey to the Far Side of the Sun) (1969), film European Space Exploration Complex (EUROSEC)

Operation Sun Probe:
Phoenix
SSTO lifting body (lander)

Dove (aka DOPPELGANGER) (SSTO lifting body)
2069
EUROSEC mission to a newly discovered unknown planet orbiting on exactly the opposite side of the Sun from Earth. Ross is a veteran of two Mars missions.[60][61][62]
Neil Stryker, Col. The Stranger (aka Stranded in Space) (1973), TV movie Pilgrim (3-man interplanetary craft) Contemporary
NASA astronaut who crash-lands on a duplicate of Earth ruled by a totalitarian regime.[63]

Sun

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Norman Paul "Dave" Davis, Maj. (Commander)
Bernhard "Bud" Gierr, Capt.
Orren "Doc" Lorimer, Dr. (Scientist)
Houston, Houston, Do You Read? (1976), novella NASA
Sunbird One
Near Future (before 2000)
Crew of first circumsolar mission travels forward to time when male humans no longer exist.[64]
Euclid Station:
Takumi
George
Lizzy (no last names given)
Unnamed personnel

Satellite tender:
Max (Pilot) (no last name given)
Travis "Trav" Hill, Ph.D.

High-orbit shuttle:
Six unnamed astronauts

Robin Braide (CAPCOM)

Starfire (test flight):
Robin Braide (Commander)
Leroy "Spin" Calder (Pilot)
Melinda Wooster (Navigation and communication [NAVCOM])
James "Jimmy" Giles, Lt. Col. (USAF) (Mission Specialist)
Linwood "Doc" Deveraux, Dr. (Propulsion control [PROP])

Starfire (operational flight):
Robin Braide (Commander)
Spin Calder (Pilot)
Melinda Wooster (NAVCOM)
Travis Hill, Prof. (Ph.D.) (Mission Specialist)
Linwood Deveraux, Dr. (PROP)

Dick Crease (Alternate crew commander)
Starfire (1988), novel NASA:
Euclid Station (polar orbit space station)
Satellite tender (call sign "Twinkletoes")
High-orbit shuttle

Archimedes Station (equatorial orbit space station)

Starfire (fusion-powered spacecraft)
c. 2015 (September) – August 2023
Fusion-powered spacecraft Starfire flies operational mission to Apollo asteroid 2021 XA (a.k.a. Everest), which is falling into the Sun. Wooster and Hill are first humans on an asteroid.[65]
Skytown:
"Skeet" Kelso, Adm.
Avery
Unnamed personnel

Helios:
Steve Kelso, Capt. (Commander)
Borg, Capt. (Executive Officer)
Alex Noffe (UK) (Project Officer)
Harvard Clark Gordon, Lt.
McBride
Jensen Tracy "Bobby" Meeks, Lt. (Cryogenics and propulsion)
Ken Minami, Dr. (Japan)
Lamare
T.C. (France)
Seven other astronauts
Solar Crisis (1990), film United Command:
Skytown (space station)
U.S.S. Helios
Ra (probe)
Chicago (cargo ship)
2050
Mission to deflect solar flare from destroying all life on Earth. Noffe is a "biogenetically enhanced human".[66]
Icarus I:
Pinbacker (Captain)
Fischer
Nakazawa
Lin
Esteves
Chow
Boes
White (no first names given)

Icarus II:
Kaneda (Captain)
Harvey (Comms Officer/Second-in-command)
"Cassie" Cassidy (Pilot)
Mace (Engineer/Co-pilot)
Trey (Navigator)
"Cory" Corazon (Biologist/Life support)
Robert Capa (Physicist)
Searle, Dr. (Psych Officer)
Sunshine (2007), film Icarus Project:
Icarus I
Icarus II
2050

2057
Icarus I vanishes on mission to reignite dying Sun with nuclear device; seven years later, Icarus II crew attempt same mission.[67][68]

Mercury

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Willard "Will" Rowson (Captain)
Camille Burkett, Ph.D. (Mineralogist)
Eileen Harmon, Dr. (Stratigrapher)
Joe Mardikian, Dr. (Geophysicist)
Tom Marini, Dr. (Biologist)
Milt Schlossberg, Dr. (Astronomer)
Luigi Aiello
Babineau (Medic) (no first name given)
Ren Hargedon
Mary Spurr (Spacesuit technician)
Eric Trackman (Nuclear engineer)
Arnie Zaino (Communications specialist)
"Hot Planet" (1963), short story Albireo Future
Crew investigating Mercury's development of a temporary atmosphere.[69][70]
Clifford Greenberg, Col. 2061: Odyssey Three (1987), novel Unknown 2030s
First man on Mercury, who landed at the south pole, joins the complement of the luxury spaceliner Universe thirty years later for the first landing on Halley's Comet.[71]
Marshall Donnington (Commander)
Lee Tahori (Pilot)
Victoria Preston
Collision Earth (2011), TV movie Space Shuttle
USS Nautilus
Near Future (Autumn)
Astronauts preparing to orbit Mercury when solar event sets planet on collision course with Earth.
John Russell, Capt. Give Me Space (2016), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut stranded on inhabited Mercury by lack of fuel.

Venus

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Harringway Hawling, Prof. (Commander/Physicist) (US)
Raimund Brinkman/Robert Brinkman (Pilot) (Germany) (American in US version)
Durand, Prof. (Chief Engineer) (USSR) (French in US version)
Lao Tsu/Tchen Yu, Dr. (Linguist/Biologist) (China)
Sumiko Omigura, M.D. (Physician) (Japan)
Orloff, Prof. (Engineer/Nuclear Physicist) (Poland)
Sikarna, Prof. (Mathematician) (India)
Talua (Communications)
First Spaceship on Venus (1960), film World Federation for Space Research:
Luna 3 (Moonbase)
Kosmokrator I (Cosmostrator I in US version)
1970 (1985 in US version)
First mission to Venus discovers remnants of extinct civilization. Some names and nationalities different in original German version; in US version, Brinkman was first American on Moon.[72][73][74][75]
Jerry Garfield (Engineer-Navigator)
Graham "Hutch" Hutchins, Dr (Biologist)
George "Cole" Coleman (Scientist)
"Before Eden" (1961), short story Morning Star Future (before 2010)
Discoverers of life near the south pole of Venus.[76]
Barbara Clinton (Captain) (USCG Aux)
Dana Perry (Navigator/Medical Technician)
Joanna Sue Toliver (Engineer)
Sea Hunt
The Aquanettes (1961), TV
Operation Astronette Contemporary
Female astronauts training for mission to Venus.
Vega:
Kern/Alfred Kerns, Capt.
Scherba/Allan Sherman/Howard Sherman
Masha/Marsha Evans[m]

Sirius:
Ilya Vershinin/Brandon Lockhart/William "Billy" Lockhart, Cmdr.
Alyosha/André Ferneau
Bobrov/Hans Walters
Planeta Bur (a.k.a. Planet of Storms, Cosmonauts on Venus) (1962), film

Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965), film

Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (aka The Gill Women of Venus) (1967), film
Soviet Union:
Sirius
Vega
Capella (ships unnamed in Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women)[n]

United States:
Space Station Texas (Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women only)
Near Future (Planeta Bur)

2020 (Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet)

1998–2000 (Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women)
Three-spacecraft expedition to Venus loses spacecraft Capella to meteor; other two crews discover reptilian creatures and evidence of intelligent life. Film was twice re-edited for American release with character names changed.[77][78][79][80][81]
Jefferson "Jeff" Barton, Brig. Gen. The Outer Limits
Cold Hands, Warm Heart (1964), TV
Project Vulcan Near Future
Astronaut afflicted by a mysterious disease after a mission to Venus.[82]
Howie "Shorty" (no last name given)
Eric "Doc" Donovan (last name uncertain)
"Becalmed in Hell" (1965), short story NASA:
Venus ship
c. 1980s?
NASA astronauts in danger on mission to Venus. Eric, survivor of spacecraft crash on Moon, is an isolated central nervous system plugged into controls of Venus ship.[83][84]
Arcturus III:
Two unnamed astronauts

Arcturus IV:
Unnamed astronaut
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
The Silent Saboteurs (1965), TV
United States:
Arcturus III
Arcturus IV
1976
When foreign power uses force field to destroy Arcturus III on re-entry, Seaview personnel must save Arcturus IV from same fate.[85]
Arthur "Artie"
Cory
(last names not given)
"I Am the Doorway" (1971), short story Project Zeus Near Future (after 1979)
Presumed NASA crew on flight to Venus similar to cancelled Manned Venus Flyby. Arthur infected with alien organism, possibly during Cory's EVA; left paraplegic when parachutes malfunction. Cory dies in landing. Other astronauts mentioned: Markhan and Jacks made first Mars landing in 1979; Pedersen and Lederer lost in solar orbit on Apollo mission; John Davis killed by meteoroid strike on orbital observatory.[86][87]
Kennedy II:
X
Y
Z (Commander) (names not given)

Venus mission:
Joseph "Joe" Jackson/Jack Josephson, Capt. (Commander)
Harry M. Evans, Col. (USAF) (Co-Pilot)
Beyond Apollo (1972), novel Kennedy II (Mars spacecraft)

Unknown (Venus spacecraft)
May 1976

1981
After disastrous manned Mars mission in 1976, two-man Venus mission ends in madness and death.[88]
Cloudlab:
Ed Townsend (Project Director)
Deborah Townsend (Communications specialist)
Chang Wu (Computer Center staff)
Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. (Algae Ecology biologists) (no first names given)
c. 50 unnamed personnel

Hoverjet:
David White (Pilot)
Chris Wagner (Technician)
"Cloudlab" (1975), short story Cloudlab (space station)
Hoverjets
Future
While on algae-seeding mission from station in Venusian atmosphere, White and Wagner become first humans on Venus when they crash-land on Sagan Mountain.[89]
Goodie, Dr. 1st Issue Special #10 (January 1976), comic book NASA:
Alpha Zero
Contemporary
Surgeon injured on mission to Venus is turned into cyborg by aliens and becomes leader of a superhero group.[90][91]
Antares:
Ted Shaw (Mission Commander)
Nadia Schilling (Germany) (Pilot/Second-in-command)
Maddux Donner (Engineer/Venus lander pilot)
Zoe Barnes (Geologist/Venus lander co-pilot)
Jen Weston Crane (Canada) (Biologist)
Evram "Ev" Mintz, Dr. (Israel) (Physician/Psychiatrist)
Paula Morales (Payload Specialist)
Steven "Wass" Wassenfelder (Physicist)

Mike Goss, Dr. (Flight Director)
Rollie Crane, Cmdr. (CAPCOM)
Claire Dereux, Dr. (Canada) (Flight Surgeon)
Ajay Sharma (India) (Engineer)
Arnel Poe, Ph.D. (Engineer)
Defying Gravity (2009), TV International Space Organization (ISO):
Orion 2
Supply pod

Antares
Crossbow (Venus lander)
Talos (Mars lander)
2047

2052 (September – November)
In 2047, ASCANs train for potential assignment to Antares mission. Five years later, Antares departs Earth on grand tour of solar system, starting with Venus. Mission commander Rollie Crane and engineer Sharma are replaced at last minute by backups Shaw and Donner due to mysterious buildups of cardiac plaque. Crew launches from Earth on Orion 2 on September 27, 2052.
E-B command ship:
Ivar (Commander)
Sandrine (no last names given)

merleta:
Bruno Almeida (Scientist)
Vinicius Santos (Scientist)

HighPoint space station:
Tania Stern
Tom Weatherell
Mason Cline
"Windshear" (2015), short story Euro-Brazilian (E-B) mission:
Command ship
merleta (Lifting body/aerostat)
Recovery dart

HighPoint Industries:
Space station
Landis (aerostat)
Future
Brazilian astronaut Almeida is stranded aboard damaged merleta after collision with recovery dart.[92]
Unknown Russian spacecraft:
Sergei (no last name given)

NashaSlava1:
Klara
Vasily
Yuraj (no last names given)

JanHus1:
Jakub Procházka
Spaceman of Bohemia (2017), novel Russia:
Unknown spacecraft
NashaSlava1 (space shuttle)

Space Program of the Czech Republic (SPCR):
JanHus1 (space shuttle)
2018 (April – Winter)
Missions to investigate comet dust cloud between Earth and Venus; Russian missions are secret "phantom" missions. Klara's mother, Dasha Sergijovna, crewed a "phantom" suicide mission with another cosmonaut in 1962, trying to reach Mars.[93]

Mars

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Samuel A. "Sam" Conrad
Warren Marcusson
"Brothers Beyond the Void" (1952), short story

The Twilight Zone
People Are Alike All Over (1960), TV
Unknown Near Future
Travellers to Mars; Marcusson is killed on landing, Conrad imprisoned by Martians. (In short story Marcusson travels to Mars alone, and his first name is Charles.)[94][95][96]
Mars 1:
Edward "Ed" McCauley, Col. (Commander)
Jim Nichols, Capt.[o]
Ralph Devers, Maj.

Mars 2:
Edward McCauley, Col. (Commander)
Vic Devery, Maj.
James Nichols, Capt.[p]
Morrow, Dr. (Scientist)

Russia:
Tolchek, Col. (Commander)
Gulyt, Maj.
Men into Space
Mission To Mars, Flight To the Red Planet (1960), TV
United States Air Force:
Mars 1
Mars 2

Russia:
Unnamed spacecraft
c. 1970 – 1980
Initial efforts to reach Mars. Mars 1 aborts flight to rescue Russian crew; Mars 2 lands on Phobos.[1][2]
Harold Barth, Lt Col. (Commander)
Robert L. Greene, Maj. (Doctor)
Saul Moulton, 1st Lt.
Edward Krozney, Capt.
James Wallach, Capt.
Luthern J. White, Capt.
"Whatever Gods There Be" (1961), short story Groundbreaker II Future (Late 20th or early 21st century)
Crew of an early Mars mission who find themselves faced with an agonizing choice after a landing accident forces them to dump weight or be unable to leave the planet.[97]
George Lincoln
John F. Adams
Dwight D. Roosevelt
Thomas Alva Wright
"Harry Protagonist, Brain-Drainer" (1964), short short story NASA:
Project Long Leap
Near Future
Disaster ensues when the minds of millions of Americans are linked to those of the crew of the first Mars mission.[98]
M-1:
Fred Thomas, Capt. (Commander)
Paul Lazzari, Capt.

M-2:
Charles "Lucky" Merritt, Maj. (Commander)
James "Jim" Bowman, Lt.
Jack Buckley, Capt.
Frank Johnson, Capt.
The Outer Limits
The Invisible Enemy (1964), TV
M-1
M-2
2021
2024
Investigating the deaths of the two-man crew of the M-1 mission, the M-2 crew discovers carnivorous creatures living under the Martian sands.[99][100]
Dan "Mac" McReady, Col. (Commander)
Christopher "Kit" Draper, Cmdr. (USN) (Co-Pilot)
Robinson Crusoe on Mars (1964), film Mars Gravity Probe-1 (Elinor M) Future
NASA astronauts visiting Mars; one dies, the other is stranded.[101][102]
Tigran Biryuzov
Five unnamed cosmonauts
The Wanderer (1964), novel First Soviet People's Expedition (three ships) Near Future
Cosmonauts orbiting Mars when artificial planet emerges from hyperspace into Earth orbit.[11]
Walt Dangerfield
Lydia Dangerfield
Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb (1965), novel Dutchman IV c. 1980s
Mars-bound astronauts trapped in Earth orbit by the outbreak of World War III.[103]
Jack Westermark, Capt.
Eight unnamed crewmembers
"Man In His Time" (1965), short story Unknown (UK?) Near Future (August)
Westermark, sole survivor of first manned Mars mission, finds himself living 3.3077 minutes ahead of Earth time.[104]
Alec Barham, Col. The Outer Limits
The Brain of Colonel Barham (1965), TV
Unknown Near Future
Astronaut dying of leukemia volunteers for project to install his brain in Mars probe.[105]
Kane, Col. (Commander)
Beard
"Doc" Harlow, Maj.
Nazarro (Radioman) (No first names given)
The Time Tunnel
One Way To The Moon (1966), TV
Mars Excursion Module (M.E.M.) 4 1978
American astronauts on first manned Mars flight make emergency landing on Moon in Mare Nectaris.[106][107]
American (unnamed)
Russian (unnamed)
Chinese (unnamed)
I tre cosmonauti (a.k.a. The Three Astronauts) (1966), picture book Unknown Future
Three astronauts who land simultaneously on Mars.[108]
Swenson, Col. (Command Pilot)
Witthoft
Reilly, Dr.
(First names not given)
"Pioneer Trip" (1967), short story Unknown c. 1976
Crew of the first manned US mission to Mars, faced with a critical medical emergency five weeks out from Earth.[109]
Friedman, Capt.
Gulliver, Lt.
Haertel (MS)
Unnamed astronauts
Welcome to Mars (1967), novel Project Ares:
Von Braun
Two unnamed sister ships
c. 1980s
After two teenagers get stranded on Mars testing a home made anti-gravity device, NASA is forced to mount a rescue mission using more conventional means.[110]
Shioda, Dr.

Mars mission:
Sano (Captain)
Lisa (Biologist) (US)
Miyamoto (Communications Officer)
Stein, Dr. (Physician)

Rescue rocket:
Michiko, Capt.
The X from Outer Space (1967), film AAB Gamma
Lunar Base
Rescue rocket
Future
Seventh attempted Mars mission after previous missions disappeared. Shioda is replaced by Stein due to illness.[111][112]
Mike Blaiswick, Col. (Pilot)
Duncan
Nick Grant (Geologist)

Soviet Union:
Three unnamed cosmonauts
Mission Mars (1968), film Unknown Future
American astronauts encounter deadly sphere on Mars.[113][114][115]
Mars Probe 6:
Carrington, Maj.
Jim Daniels

Mars Probe 7:
Joe Lefee
Frank Michaels

Recovery 7:
Charles "Charlie" Van Lyden
Doctor Who
The Ambassadors of Death (1970), TV
Mars Probe Project (UK):
Mars Probe 6
Mars Probe 7
Recovery 7
Contemporary/Near Future
Daniels was killed on Mars by non-Martian aliens during Mars Probe 6 mission, driving Carrington insane. Van Lyden attempts recovery of Lefee and Michaels.
Adrian Fairley (UK)
Four unnamed astronauts

Two unnamed astronauts (US)
Doctor Who
"Soldiers from Zolta" (1970), short story
Two international spacecraft:
Orbiter
Mars Bug
Contemporary/Near Future
Fairley, sole survivor of crash landing of Mars Bug, makes contact with aliens on Mars.[116]
George Cosby, Dr
Ralph Norton, Maj
William O'Brien
Mack Sheldon
Irwin Trott
Allan Watts, Dr
Briggs
Compton
Glennon
Gray
Jenkins
Lawrenson
McKinley
Morphy
Radcliffe
Thompson
Vaux
Wellgarth
Williams
The Earth is Near (1970 (German), 1973 (English)), novel Project Alpha Near Future
Crew of the first manned expedition to Mars.[117]
NASA:
Henry C. "Hank" Barstow, Col. (Chief of Astronaut Office)
Bertrand L. "Bert" Richmond, Col. (Director of Flight Crew Operations)
Tom Andretti
Bill Desey
Rick Johnson
Dave McWharter
Dick Ohlman
Allan "Al" Samson
Bill Wheatley

Planetary Fleet One:
Conrad H.[q] "Connie" Trasker, Jr., Col. (USAF) (Mission Commander/MLV Commander)
Alvin S. "Jazz"[r] Weickert III, Cmdr. (USN) (CSV Commander)
J. V. "Jayvee" Halleck, Dr. (MSV Commander)
Petros S. "Pete" Balkis, M.D. (MSV Co-Commander)

Stuart "Stu" Yule, Lt. Col. (CAPCOM)
Roger Webb, Col. (USAF) (Backup CSV Commander)

Planetary Fleet Two:
Conrad H. Trasker, Jr. (Mission Commander/MLV Commander)
Hugo S. "Gaudy" Gaudet, Cmdr. (USN) (CSV Commander)
Emerson "Em" Wacker, Dr. (MSV Commander)
Robert "Bob" Curtis, Dr. (MSV Co-Commander)

Soyuz 19:
Two unnamed cosmonauts
The Throne of Saturn (1971), novel NASA
Space Station Mayflower
Project Argosy:

Planetary Fleet One ("Piffy One"):
Mars Landing Vehicle (MLV) (Santa Maria)
Command-Service Vehicle (CSV) (Nina [sic])
Medico-Scientific Vehicle (MSV) (Pinta)
Mars Landing Module (MLM) (Adventurer)

Planetary Fleet Two ("Piffy Two"):
MLV (Santa Maria)
CSV (Nina)
MSV (Pinta II)
MLM (Adventurer)

Soviet Union:
Space Station Stalin
Soyuz 19 ("Man in the Moon")
Late 1970s (April – January)
First planned Mars mission encounters Soviet interference during test phase at Tranquillity Base on Moon. Trasker is Gemini and Apollo veteran; Weickert flew Gemini mission with Trasker. MLV, CSV and MSV are modified Apollo CSMs with NERVA engines, launched by three Saturn Vs.[118]
Olympus:
Richmond (Commander)
Nine unnamed astronauts

Pegasus:
Evans
Brennan
Sam (no last name given)
Two unnamed astronauts
"Transit of Earth" (1971), short story Space Administration (NASA?):
Olympus, Pegasus
May 1984
Crew of lander Pegasus stranded on Mars prior to a transit of Earth across the Sun.[119]
John Phillips

Mars mission:
Brice Randolph, Col.
Higgins
The Astronaut (1972), TV movie Unknown Near Future
NASA delays disclosure of death of astronaut on a mission to Mars; another man is surgically altered to deceive the wife and the public.[120]
Walter "Bud" Richardson, Col. (Command Pilot)
John "Johnny" Oxenshuer, Capt.
Dave Vogel, Maj.
The Feast of St. Dionysus (1972), novella NASA c. 1990
After Richardson and Vogel die in sandstorm on first manned Mars mission, Oxenshuer seeks spiritual enlightenment in California desert. Mars landing in Solis Lacus.[121]
Phoenix One:
Tadell Hansard (US)
Anoshi Wantanabe (Japan)
Bapti Lal Bose (India)

Phoenix Two:
Feodore Aleksandrovitch Asturnov (Russia)
Dirk Welles (UK)
Bern Callieux (Pan-European Community of Nations)

Space Shuttles:
Unnamed US astronauts
The Far Call (1973), serial; (1978), novel Phoenix Program:
Phoenix One
Phoenix Two
1983
International crew of the first manned mission to Mars.[122][123][124][125]
Unnamed astronaut
Ben Johnson
"The Mars Stone" (1973), short short story Zeus 7:
MEM
Near Future
First astronauts on Mars make astonishing discovery.[126]
Jules Fishman, Capt.
Unnamed woman
"Ups and Downs" (1973), short story United States:
Mars Project
1993
Astronaut on first Mars mission finds mysterious woman in his spacecraft.[127]
Albert Michaelson Thorsen, Prof. Marsman meets the Almighty (1975), novelette Unknown
Ares
Near Future (Viking landings are referred to in the past tense.)
NASA Exobiologist selected as crew for the first American manned mission to Mars after a remarkable discovery by the first Mars rover in Solis Lacus.[128]
Charles Brubaker, Col.
Peter Willis, Lt. Col.
John Walker, Cmdr.
Capricorn One (1978), film/novel Capricorn One (Apollo-like) Contemporary/Near Future
Astronauts secretly removed from a NASA mission to Mars – aboard a faulty ship – that goes terribly wrong.[129][130]
Prometheus One:
Steve West
Mike (Last name not given)
McManus (First name not given)

Prometheus Two:
Three unnamed astronauts
The Incredible Melting Man (1978), novelization Prometheus Program:
Prometheus One
Prometheus Two
Near Future
Crews of the first American manned missions to Mars, attacked by an unknown force once they land.[s][131]
Galactic II:
Randolph Stuart, Capt.
Rigby Deems, Lt.
Frank Perlman, Lt.
Phoebe Swedlow, Cmdr.[t]
Sunstrike (1978), novel Operation Mars:
Galactic I
Galactic II
1988
Flight crew of the first manned US mission to Mars, assigned to a desperate mission to prevent a madman from destroying humanity.[133]
Tom Easton (Commander)
Bill Frager
Michael McKendrick
Meteor (1979), film/novel Challenger-2 Near Future
Astronauts on a spacecraft traveling to Mars that happens to look exactly like Skylab.[134]
Shiraz Mitradati
Petra Greenfield
Elke
Sergi
Shai-Lung
Taro
Leidu, Dr.
"Voices From The Dust" (1980), short story Unknown 2001
Astronauts exploring the Valles Marineris who discover something remarkable.[135]
NASA:
Ed Christophers
Rokby
Sylvester
Patterson
Dwyer
(First names not given for the last four US crew)

FKA:
Mikhail Aleksander
Vassili Karklin
Anatole Kuznetzov
Tchigorin
Ilyashenko
(First names not given for the last two Russian crew)

ESA:
Thomas Cavendish
Cesare Montuori
Kristian Niskanen
Axel Lorenz
The Olympus Gambit (1983), novel Eris (renamed Pallas Athene) Near Future
International crew of the first manned mission to Mars.[136]
Neal Braddock, Capt. (US)
David Tremayne (US)
Andrei Kalsinov, Col. (USSR)
Olga Denerenko (USSR)
Kurt Steiner, Maj. (GER)
Phillipe Berdoux, Dr. (FRA)
Dominica Mastrelli (ITA)
Guy Sterling (Canada)
Pamela Cooper (UK)
Murder in Space (1985), TV movie/novel Unknown
Conestoga

Space Shuttle
Delta 216
Near Future
Astronauts and cosmonauts of the International Space Exploration Administration (ISEA) returning from Mars aboard a 'space lab' whose successful mission is suddenly rocked by a series of murders.[137][u]
Redenbaugh (Commander)
Thomas (Landing party commander)
Johnboy
Woody
"The Gods of Mars" (1986), short story Plowshare
Lander
Future
NASA astronauts on first manned Mars mission encounter strange alteration of reality. Landing in Chryse Basin.[138][139]
Shuttlecraft SC37 (NASA Mars mission):
Porter, Maj. (Captain)
"Doc" (Scientist)
Unnamed personnel

Shuttlecraft SC37 (L-5 evacuation):
Roger Campbell (Computer expert/Acting captain)
Adrian Kimberly, Dr. (Science officer)
Cal (no last name given) (Security)
Billy Lynn, Lt. (Chief Engineer)
Sherrie Stevens (Nutritionist)

Shuttlecraft SC45:
Unnamed personnel

L-5:
William Hamilton, Col.
Mitchell, Lt.
Unnamed personnel
Star Crystal (1986), film Shuttlecraft SC37
Shuttlecraft SC45
L-5 space station
2032
Rock discovered near crater of Olympus Mons contains crystal computer and alien creature. Five L-5 crewmembers escape station's destruction aboard shuttlecraft.[140]
First International Mars Expedition:
Leon Odinga[v] (Nova Africa) (Chief Engineer)
Unnamed cosmonauts

Second International Mars Expedition:
Unnamed cosmonauts
Fire on the Mountain (1988), novel Pan African Space Administration (P.A.S.A.):

First International Mars Expedition

Second International Mars Expedition:
Lion
1954 (Alternate History)

October 1959 (Alternate History)
In alternate history in which John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry in 1859 was successful, cosmonaut Leon is killed in EVA accident on Mars flyby mission. Five years later, Lion makes first manned Mars landing.[141]
Nixon Orbital Park:
Leroy Johnson (National Park Service) (Station Chief)

Mary Poppins:
Natasha Alyosha Katerina Ivanovna Kirov (Captain)
Bass (no first name given) (Second Officer)
Sundiata Cinque Jeffries, M.D. (Third Officer/Chief Medical Officer)
Louis "Lou" Glamour, ASC (Cinematographer)
Cary "FF" Fonda-Fox IV (Movie Star)
Beverly "BG" Glenn (Movie Star)
Greetings Brother Buffalo Gentry (Stowaway)
Voyage to the Red Planet (1990), novel Old Moulmein Pagoda (Columbia-class space shuttle)

National Park Service (owned by Disney-Gerber):
Nixon Orbital Park

Voyager Pictures:
Mary Poppins
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (lander)
c. 2020
First manned Mars mission films motion picture. Landing near Candor Chasm in Valles Marineris canyon system. Bass and Johnson are former NASA astronauts.[142]
Martin Gold, Dr. (Geologist)
Mary Elizabeth Allen, Dr. (Physician)
Lawrence Thompson, Dr. (Physicist)

Young Astronauts:
Genshiro "Gen" Akamasu (Japan)
Sergei Mikhailovich Chuvakin (Russia)
Nathan Long (USA)
Karl Muller (Germany)
Lanie Rizzo (real name Lanie Johnson) (USA)
Noemi Tejas y Velasquez (Venezuela)
Alice Frances Thorne (New Zealand)
Oh Suk "Suki" Long (Japan)
Vikram Singh
Kovi Oldjai
Dale
David
Leon
The Young Astronauts (1990), novel Space Shuttle

United Nations To Mars Together program:
Nina
Pinta
Santa Maria
Future
Teenagers compete for opportunity to help colonize Mars.[143]
Viktor Shevchenko (Soviet Union)
Gregory "Greg" Nunn (NASA)
Angel Eyes (1991), novel Odin-Galaktika II Contemporary/Near Future
Aborted first manned flight to Mars. Odin-Galaktika II is launched by SL-17 Energiya with six strap-on boosters.[144]
Dean Irwin, Col. (USAF) (Commander)
Clifford Horner, Capt. (US Army)
John Merritt, Cmdr. (USN)
Valentina Tsarev, Col. (Russia) (Doctor)
Hiroshi Kawahito (Japan) (Computer specialist)
"The Message from Mars" (1992), short story Zeus IV November 2007 – April 29, 2008
The crew of the first manned Mars mission mysteriously fail to leave their spacecraft after returning to Earth.[145][146]
Scott Keller (USA) (Commander)
Sakata (Japan)
Petrovich
Unnamed astronaut
seaQuest DSV
Better Than Martians (1994), TV
Space Command:
Wayfarer
2018
When the Wayfarer sinks upon splashdown, seaQuest mounts a rescue mission. Astronauts took Martian core samples from Tharsis Bulge/Olympus Mons.
James (Commander)
Henry
Pierre
Don
Geoff (no last names given)
Unnamed astronaut
"Homecoming" (1995), short story NASA:
Mars 1
Near Future
When nuclear engine fails on approach to Mars, unnamed astronaut kills his crewmates in order to stay alive.[147]
Al Wells (Commander)
Ed Barkley
Pete Claridge, Dr.
The Outer Limits
The Voyage Home (1995), TV
American Space Agency (ASA):
Mars III
Contemporary/Near Future[w]
First manned Mars mission is infiltrated by ancient alien species. Barkley was first man on Mars.
First Aerospace Squadron (NASA):
Bill Amundsen (Squadron commander)

Phobos One:
Walter Gander (USA) (Commander)
Dmitri Tomasovich (Russia) (No surname given)
Three unnamed astronauts (ESA, Japan, China)

Mars Five:
Walter Gander, Capt. (USA) (Commander)
Olga Trigorin (Russia) (Engineer/First Officer)
Jason Terence (USA) (Pilot/Second Officer)
Narihara "Nari" Nigawa, Ph.D. (Japan) (Mission Specialist)
Ilsa Bierlein (ESA) (Mission Specialist)
Vassily Chebutykin, Ph.D. (Russia) (Mission Specialist)
Dong Te-Hua (China) (Mission Specialist)
Paul Fleurant (France) (Mission Specialist)
Kireiko Masachi (Japan) (Mission Specialist)
Tsen Chou-zung, Dr. (China) (Mission Specialist)
Mark Bene (Yankee Clipper return pilot)

Dean (No surname given), CAPCOM

Mars Five Alpha:
Scotty Johnston (USA) (Pilot)
Robert Prang (USA) (Sedimentologist)
Eight unnamed astronauts (USA, Russia)

Korolev Base:
Yvana Borges (Base manager)
Das "Doc C." Chalashajerian, Dr.
Pete Johnson (USA) (Biophysicist)
Akira Yamada (Japan) (Meteorologist)
Jim Flynn (USA)
Encounter with Tiber (1996), novel Phobos One:
Mars-Earth Return Cycler (MERC) Aldrin
Lander (modified Apollo II)

Mars Five:
Yankee Clipper (SSTO)
MarsHab

Mars Five Alpha:
MERC Aldrin

Korolev Base
2018

2033
On Phobos One mission, Gander and Dmitri make first manned landing on Phobos on December 25, 2018. In 2033, Mars Five and Mars Five Alpha travel to Mars to help excavate alien artifacts near established base in Crater Korolev.[29]
D-prime mission:
Adam Bleeker (CDR)
Ralph Gershon (Mars Excursion Module Pilot [MMP])

Ares:
Philip "Phil" Stone (CDR)
Natalie B. York, Ph.D. (Mission Specialist [MSP])
Ralph Gershon (MMP)
Voyage (1996), novel NASA:
D-prime mission:
Apollo CSM (New Jersey)
Mars Excursion Module (MEM) 009 (Iowa)

Ares:
Apollo CSM (Discovery)
Mission Module (Endeavor [sic])
MEM (Challenger)
August 1984 (Alternate History)

March 21, 1985 – November 6, 1986 (Alternate History)
In alternate history, D-prime mission is test flight of Mars lander (MEM) in Earth orbit. Ares flies first manned Mars mission (with Venus flyby for gravity assist); landing at Mangala Vallis in March 1986.[148]
Mars Probe:
Grosvenor
Guest (no first names given)

Mars Probe 13:
Alexander "Lex" Christian (Space Defence Division) (Commander)
Albert Fitzwilliam
Madeline Goodfellow

Mars 97:
Richard Michaels, Capt. (Commander)
Andi McCray
Bob Haigh
Claudia (no last name given)
Campbell
Singh
McGowan
Lewis (no first names given for last four)
Doctor Who
The Dying Days (1997), novel
Mars Probe Project (UK)

Mars 97 (Mars Orbiter/Mars Lander) (UK)
1970s/1980s

May 1997
Christian, accused of murdering Fitzwilliam and Goodfellow after Mars Probe 13's departure from Mars, escapes in May 1997 after 20 years' imprisonment. At the same time, Mars 97 mission to Mare Sirenum runs into trouble. Grosvenor and Guest made first manned Mars landing at bottom of Olympus Mons during earlier Mars Probe Project.[149]
Mars Voyager:
Boris Brodsky (Russia) (Commander)
Martin A. Chadwick (USA) (Geologist)
Chou Lin (China) (Physicist)
Georgi Maladev (Russia) (Pilot/Navigator)
Adam J. Thompson (USA)
Jeffery Walker, Dr. (Great Britain) (Microbiologist/Physician)
Kishi Yamoto (Japan) (Electronics specialist)

Celeste:
Adam Thompson (USA) (Commander)
Louis Alvarez (Spain) (Pilot)
Matthew C. "Matt" Duncan, Prof. (Canada) (Linguist)
Erica Williams Duncan (USA) (Registered Nurse)
Brian T. Hawkins (Great Britain) (Physicist)
Sanjay Kanti (India) (Electrical engineer)
Valeri Karamov (Russia) (Pilot)
Frank Manzoni (Italy) (Physicist)
Carlos Niemeyer (Brazil) (Communications/computer specialist)
Marina Selveg (Russia)(Microbiologist/Physician)
Henri Talon (France) (Computer specialist)
Sato Tanaka (USA) (Communications)

Copernicus:
Frank Morgan (Pilot)
Samantha Jackson (Copilot)

Lunar Colony:
Donald T. Hartman (Director)
Irene Hartman
26 unnamed personnel
The Face on Mars (1997), novel Space Station Prometheus
Mars Voyager
Explorer (lander)

Celeste (refitted Mars Voyager)
Questor (lander)
Lunar shuttle Copernicus
Lunar Colony
2040

2044
The first two manned missions to Mars investigate the mysterious "Cydonia Face", but the second expedition must combat violence from within. First landing near southeast corner of Acidalia Planitia; second landing closer to Face.[150]
Gary Hackman (Computer specialist)
Gordon A. Peacock (Computer specialist)

Aries:
William "Wild Bill" Overbeck (Commander)
Julie Ford (Mission Specialist/Geologist)
Fred Z. Randall (Computer specialist)
RocketMan (1997), film NASA:
MTS-1 Aries
Pilgrim One (lander)
Contemporary/Near Future
Geeky computer genius Randall is last-minute replacement for Hackman on first manned Mars mission; Peacock is potential alternate replacement. Landing at Planitia Base near Valles Marineris.[151][152]
Patrick Ross, Cmdr. (Captain)
Dennis Gamble
Anne "Annie" Sampas
Species II (1998), film National Space Exploration [?] (N.S.E.G.):
Excursion (incorporates space shuttle)
Lander (Eagle?)
Near Future
Ross, the first man on Mars, and Sampas are infected by alien DNA from Martian soil sample.[153][154]
Lia Poirier (Sagan Commander [Mars])
John Rank (Sagan Commander [Flight])
Andrea Singer (Mission Chemist)
Bill Malone (Mission Architect)
Sergei Andropov (Mission Biogeochemist)
Escape from Mars (1999), TV movie International Mars Venture (IMV):
Sagan
2015
Two-and-a-half year mission funded by private consortium.[155][156]
NASA:
Robbie "Robbs" Barth

Mars Consortium:
Katherine Molina (Pilot)
Venture:
Viktor Nelyubov (Commander)
Marc Bryant (Pilot/Geologist)
Julia "Jules" Barth (Biologist/Medical Officer)
Raoul Molina (Mechanic)

Valkyrie:
Claudine Jesum (France) (Commander/Medic)
Gerda Braun (Germany) (Engineer)
Lee Chen, Dr. (Exobiologist)
The Martian Race (1999), novel Mars Consortium:
Venture (Mars Landing-Habitat Module [Hab])

Airbus Group:
Valkyrie

NASA:
Earth Return Vehicle (ERV)
February 20, 2016 – March 14, 2018
NASA and ESA astronauts transfer to private companies competing for $30 billion Mars Prize. Consortium crew makes first manned landing on August 9, 2016, in Gusev Crater.[157]
John Mark Kelly, Lt.
Rose Kumagawa
Andrei Novakovich
Star Trek: Voyager
One Small Step (1999), TV
Ares IV 2032
NASA astronauts on an early mission to Mars.
Jesus do Sul:
João Fernando Conselheiro, Ph.D. (Commander)
Unnamed Brazilian astronaut

Agamemnon/Ulysses:
Seven unnamed astronauts

Don Quijote:
John Radkowski (USAF) (Commander)
Tanisha Yvonne "Tana" Jackson, M.D./Ph.D. (Medical officer/biologist)
Ryan Martin (Canada) (Systems engineer)
Chamlong "Cham" Limpigomolchai, Ph.D. (Thailand) (Geologist)
Estrela Carolina Conselheiro (Brazil) (Geologist)
Brandon Weber (impersonating Trevor Whitman) (Passenger)
Mars Crossing (2000), novel Brazil:
Jesus do Sul

NASA:
Agamemnon
Ulysses (Mars Return Launch Module)
Butterfly (Mars airplane)

Don Quijote
Dulcinea (Mars Return Launch Module)
2020

2022

2028
First three expeditions to Mars, the first two of which result in loss of all crew. Jesus do Sul lands at Martian north pole; Agamemnon lands on eastern rim of Acidalia Planitia; Don Quijote lands on edge of Felis Dorsa. Whitman wins contest for slot on third expedition.[158]
Luke Graham
Renée Coté
Nicholas Willis
Sergei Kirov
Woodrow "Woody" Blake
Jim McConnell
Terri Fisher
Phil Ohlmyer
Mission to Mars (2000), film Unknown c. 2020
NASA astronauts on the first manned mission to Mars and a follow-up mission to rescue them.[159][160]
Lee Forbes, Cmdr.
Susan Roberts
Tanya Webster
Paul Webster
Doctor Who
Red Dawn
(2000), audio play
Ares One 2000s
Crew of privately funded NASA mission. Tanya turns out to be part-Martian.
Kate Bowman, Cmdr. (USN)
Quinn Burchenal, Dr.
Bud Chantilas, Dr.
Robby Gallagher
Chip Pettengil
Ted Santen, Lt.
Red Planet (2000), film Mars-1 2057
Commercially sponsored crew investigates reported oxygen reduction of automated terraforming of Mars. Solar flare complicates mission and landing crew are at mercy of rogue robot.[161][162]
NASA:
Susan Dillard (Scientist)

Ares 7/10:
Kennedy "Hampster" Hampton (USN) (CDR)
Alexis "Lex" Ohta, Ph.D. (USAF) (PLT)
Valerie "Valkerie" Jansen, M.D., Ph.D. (MS1)
Bob "Kaggo" Kaganovski, Ph.D. (MS2)

Joshua "Josh" Bennett, CAPCOM/Flight Director
Oxygen (2001), The Fifth Man (2002), novels NASA:

Ares 7/10:
Mars Habitation Module (Hab)
Mars Ascent Vehicle (MAV)
Earth Return Vehicle (ERV) / Earth Landing Capsule (ELC)
August 14, 2012 – July 4, 2014 (Oxygen)

March 16 – May 9, 2015 (The Fifth Man)
When first manned mission to Mars sustains explosion en route, suspicion runs rampant among the crew that one of them is a saboteur. Launch on January 25, 2014; landing on July 3, 2014 at 30°S 95°E / 30°S 95°E / -30; 95. Eight months later, crew confronts possibility of infection by Martian pathogen.[163][164]
Andre Vishniac (Captain)
Susana "Susan" Sánchez (Pilot/Second-in-command)
Luca Baglioni (Engineer)
Jenny "Jen" Johnson (Physician)
Fidel Rodrigo (Astrobiologist)
Herbert "Herb" Sagan (Geologist)
Lowell (no first name given) (remains on Ares)
Stranded (2001), film NASA/JPL/LMA/ESA:
Ares Mission:
Ares (orbital module)
Bello (descent module)
2020
Crew of first manned Mars mission is stranded after descent module crash-lands near Martian equator and Valles Marineris. Sagan is first man on Mars.[165]
McCarthy (USAF) (Commander)
Jeffries
Sally "Sal" Spirek (USAF) (Medic/Scientist)
Ed Enright, Ph.D. (Geologist)
"Ulla, Ulla" (2002), short story NASA:
Fortitude
2019 – 2022
First manned mission to Mars discovers strangely familiar technology from extinct civilization. McCarthy and Jeffries took part in return Moon mission in 2015. Mars landing on September 2, 2020, in Amazonis Planitia.[166]
Nelson Barnes, Capt. (USAF)
Three unnamed astronauts
John Doe
Illegal Alien (2003), TV
United States Air Force:
Mars Habitat One (Experimental)
February 3 – 7, 2003
Astronaut testing technology for potential Mars mission staggers out of woods and is shot by teenager.[167]
Asaph Hall:
Don Lawson
Sasim Remtulla

Percival Lowell:
Chuck Zakarian (Commander)
Unnamed astronauts
"Mikeys" (2004), short story NASA:
Asaph Hall/Mike Collins Station
Percival Lowell
c. 2039
Arriving on Deimos ahead of planned Mars landing by Percival Lowell, Lawson and Remtulla make major discovery.[168]
Ares I:
Ritter (Captain) (No first name given)
Boris Ivanov (Pilot)
Jeanne Monier (Engineering Physicist)
Roel van Dijk (Planetary Physicist)

Mars Trailblazer I:
Poul Eriksen, Col. (AFSPC) (Captain)
Jacques "Jack" Boutillier, Maj. (USMC Space Division) (Pilot)
Linde Hoerter (Planetary atmosphere specialist)
Nobuo Okita (Japan) (Nuclear Physicist/Engineer)
"Orbital Base Fear" (2004), short story Consortium (NASA, ESA, Russian Federation, Japan):
Mars Expedition I

Consortium (ESA, Russian Federation):
Ares I

NASA/Air Force Space Command/Japan:
Mars Trailblazer I/Orbital Base Phobos
Valkyrie (landing shuttle)
Future
Seven years after failure of Mars Expedition I, Consortium and US crews race to be first on Mars. Trailblazer lands on Phobos near Stickney Crater.[169]
Tom Houst Tom on Mars (2005), short film The Agency:
Delta II
2049 – 2054
After traveling to Mars alone on second manned Mars mission, Houst is told that his girlfriend on Earth never existed.[170]
Sly Delta Honey The Sea of Perdition (2006), short film Mars Expedition Future
Cosmonaut separated from expedition encounters strange creature on Mars.[171]
Glenn Hartwell (US) (Administrator) (International Space Development Agency)
Max "Bull" Teller,[x] Dr. (US/ISDA) (CAPCOM)

Project Olympus:
Richard "Rick" Erwin, Capt. (USN/ISDA) (Mission Commander)
Mikhail Cerenkov, Maj. (Russian Air Force/ISDA) (Mission Pilot)
Antoine Hébert, Dr. (EU - France/ISDA) (Mission Specialist - Flight Engineer [Nuclear Propulsion])
Jacqueline "Jackie" Decelles, Dr. (Canada/ISDA) (Mission Specialist - Robotics Engineer)
Lucia Alarcon, Maj. (M.D.) (USAF/ISDA) (Mission Specialist - Flight Surgeon)
Hiromi Okuda, Dr. (Japan/ISDA) (Mission Specialist - Astrobiologist)
Race to Mars (2007), TV International Mars Partnership (IMP)
Project Olympus:
Shirase (Cargo Vehicle)
Atlantis (MarsHab)
Gagarin (Mars Ascent/Descent Vehicle)
Terra Nova (Mars Transit Vehicle)
Columbia (Earth Return Capsule)
September 12, 2026 – August 31, 2031
International crew racing Chinese to find water and life on Mars. Hartwell commanded first mission back to Moon; Erwin previously traveled to the Moon. Departure from Earth orbit on January 26, 2030; Mars landing on December 22, 2030 in Dao Vallis; return to Earth on August 31, 2031. Terra Nova is propelled by nuclear thermal rockets.[172]
Barsoom Express:
Jerry Beaden (USN)

Tsiolkovski:
Nathan Nesius (Captain)
Carroway, Dr. (Physician) (no first name given)
Michael Carroll
Unnamed French geologist

ISS:
Makarov, Col. (Russia) (no first name given)
Unnamed personnel
"Cathedral" (2009), novelette NASA:
Barsoom Express
Tsiolkovski (aka Tsio)

International Space Station
Soyuz
Near Future[y]
Beaden fakes oxygen leak on Martian flyby mission to force landing on Mars and launch of rescue mission, kick-starting human exploration of Mars. Landing west of Olympus Mons.[173][174]
Zeus:
Mike Goss (Mission Commander)
Calliope:
Ted Shaw
Maddux Donner
Sharon Lewis
Jeff Walker
Defying Gravity (2009), TV International Space Organization (ISO)
Mars 2042:
Zeus
Calliope (Mars lander)
2042
Calliope lands in Gusev Crater (at 14°36′S 173°30′E / 14.6°S 173.5°E / -14.6; 173.5) with secret goal of recovering alien artifact. Walker becomes first human on Mars, but Shaw and Donner are forced to leave Lewis and Walker behind on surface due to dust storm.
Adelaide Brooke, Cmdr.
Ed Gold
Tarak Ital
Andy Stone
Margaret Cain
Mia Bennett
Yuri Kerenski
Steffi Ehrlich
Roman Groom
Doctor Who
The Waters of Mars (2009), TV
Apollo 34
Bowie Base One
November 21, 2059
First humans on Mars (contradicting earlier Doctor Who stories), menaced by a water-based Martian life-form and destined by history to die. Base located in Gusev Crater.[175]
Annie Norris, Col. (Commander)
Tom Tyler, Maj.
Sam Tyler
Ray Carling
Chris Skelton
Life on Mars
Life is a Rock (2009), TV
Aries Project:
Hyde 1-2-5
2035
Crew travels to Mars in suspended animation, using "neural-stims" to keep brains occupied; as a result, Sam Tyler believes he is time-traveling NYPD detective.
NASA:
Mitchell Dodd (Scientist)

Ares:
Christopher Eugene "Chris" Burke, Capt. (USAF) (Commander)
Trisha "Trish" Merriday (USMC) (First Officer)
Terry Kessler (Command Module Pilot)
Owen "Beech" Beechum (Mission Specialist)
Offworld (2009), novel Ares 2031 – 2033
NASA astronauts return from first manned Mars mission to find Earth deserted.[176]
NASA:
Norman Backus (Pilot)
Roseanne Kim (Scientist)
Denny (no last name given)

Excelsior:
James "Jim" Rose, Capt. (Commander/Pilot)
Jed Richards, Col. (First Officer)
José Rodrigues (Science Officer)

Geronimo:
Steve Watanabe, Lt. (Pilot)
Abu Jmil (First Officer)
Deborah "Debbie" Quartz (Science Officer)

Pequod:
Brandon Lepper, Capt. (Pilot/Science Officer)
Laurie Corelli, Capt. (First Officer)
Arnold "Arnie" Gilmore, Dr. (Chief Medical Officer)
The Four Fingers of Death (2010), novel NASA:

Excelsior
Geronimo
Pequod
Earth Return Vehicle (ERV)
September 30, 2025 – October 2026
Small-time writer Montese Crandall novelizes remake of 1963 film The Crawling Hand (q.v.), adding back-story of first manned Mars mission finding flesh-eating bacteria on Mars. Landing near Valles Marineris.[177]
Perry Scott, Cmdr. The Planeteer (2010), short film NASA:
Horizon I
April 22 – 25, 2010
Two-time space shuttle commander Scott helps eleven-year-old locate missing crew of first manned Mars mission.[178]
Kim Yeun-ja (Korea) (Painter/Citizen-Astronaut)

Kasei 18:
Lynne Ann Morse (Flanders?) (Commander/Climatologist)
Kabir Abuja (Nigeria) (Engineer)
Audra Miskinis (Lithuania) (Paleobiologist)
Gary Shu (Newsblogger/Citizen-Astronaut)

Expedition 18:
Nam Dae-jung (Korea) (Commander/Geochemist)
Suma Handini (Pakistan) (Engineer)
Li Huang (China) (Climatologist)
Three unnamed astronauts
"Citizen-Astronaut" (2011), short story United Nations Space Agency (UNSA):
Kasei 18
Expedition 18
Future
Shu replaces the injured Kim as the first Citizen-Astronaut to travel to Mars.[179][180]
Tom (Captain)
Chandra (Medical Officer)
Archie
Paolo
Rajuk (no last names given)
Zoë Morrison, Dr. (Astrobotanist)
"Goodnight Moons" (2011), short story NASA:
Conestoga
Sacagawea (return vehicle)
Near Future
Forty days into first manned Mars mission, Morrison learns that she is pregnant.[181]
Unnamed astronaut Last Flight (2011), short film Unknown 2038
Lone survivor of Mars Base during nuclear war on Earth walks through Sinai Dorsa and Noctis Labyrinthus.[182]
Two unnamed astronauts Mars (2011), short film Eleanor (Unnamed fictional country)

Unnamed lander (Unnamed fictional country)
Future
Astronauts from different countries make first Mars landings nearly simultaneously.[183]
Fire Star:
Wen Xiang (China) (Commander)
Cooper Jackson (USA) (Flight Surgeon)
Julie Davis (USA) (Biologist)
Victoria Orlova, Prof. (Russia) (Astrophysicist)
Junior Astronauts:
Nicolas "Nico" Moreau (France)
Aneesa Malik (India)
Unnamed junior astronaut

Mars Base I:
Oscar Schweiger (Chief Mars Settlement Officer)
Ivan (Scientist)
Helena (Scientist)
Gene (Staff engineer)
Unnamed staff
Mars: You Decide How to Survive! (2011), gamebook Fire Star
Mars Base I
Near Future
Junior astronauts join mission to prepare Mars Base I for permanent colonists. Mars Base I located near Valles Marineris and Arsia Mons.[184]
Zoe Barnes (Captain)
Emma Turk, Cmdr. (First Officer)
Emit Barnes, Dr. (Scientist)
Rogers, Nurse (no first name given)
Isaiah
Khan
Raj
Sam (no last names given)
Unnamed astronauts
D.O.G.S. of Mars (2012), graphic novel Department of Global Surveyors (D.O.G.S.):
Mars Base Bowie
Future
Astronauts on mission to terraform Mars are attacked by nocturnal Martian creatures.[185]
Project Emergence:
Bahe, Gen. (Navajo Nation)
P. Clarke (Corporate Official)
Unnamed guard

Emergence:
Tazbah Redhouse, Cdr. (Pilot) (Navajo Nation)
Tobias Smith, Dr. (Omnicorn Corporation)
Futurestates
The 6th World: An Origin Story (2012), TV
International Space Station

Project Emergence:
Emergence
Future
First mission to colonize Mars uses genetically engineered corn. Gen. Bahe is an experienced astronaut.[186]
NASA:
Elma York, Dr.
The Lady Astronaut of Mars (2012), novelette

"Rockets Red" (2015), short story
First Mars Expedition

Longevity Mission
1952 – 1954 / 1980s (Alternate History)

1974 (Alternate History)
In alternate history in which asteroid struck Washington, D.C., in mid-20th century, York took part in First Mars Expedition in 1952. Thirty years later, she is chosen for Longevity Mission to exoplanet LS-579.[187][188]
J.T. (Canada) (no last name given) Man On Mars (2012), short film Unknown Near Future
Astronaut launching for 506-day mission to Mars.[189]
Jeff (Scotland)
Two unnamed astronauts
Phone Home (2012), short film NASA Future
Astronaut calls his wife from Mars.[190]
Campbell (Commander) (no first name given)
Craig Rowe (Pilot/Second-in-command)
Amy DeLuca (Lander pilot)
Tom Barischoff (Chief Engineer)
Kristen Bradfield
Ed Carradine
Fumi Mashimo (Palaeobiologist)
Chris Mendenhall
Claire O'Brian (Geophysicist)
Aaron Rhodes
Lori Childs Rowe (Senior Planetary Scientist/Ice Miner/Engineer's Mate/Assistant Astrogator)
Beth Young
Diana Cosatti
Frank Cosatti
Unnamed astronaut
"Taking the High Road" (2012), short story NASA:
Liberty
Mars Lander
April 12, 2037 – June 24, 2062
Mars-bound crew facing death due to fuel farm explosion on Mars changes course to match orbit with comet 10P/Tempel.[191][192]
Lisa Animation Domination High-Def
The Dumbest Girl on Mars (2013), TV
NASA Future
Astronaut sent to establish Mars base stupidly takes off her helmet.[193]
Unnamed Mission Commander
Three unnamed astronauts
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 3: Planet of the Pies (2013), picture book NASA Contemporary/Near Future
Astronauts discover "thick, glutinous substance" falling from the sky on Mars.[194]
Bradley Emerson Elliott, Maj. The Eye With Which The Universe Beholds Itself (2013), novella Repurposed Skylab as transfer vehicle, with LM for the surface landing 1979 (Alternate History)
Mission to Mars based on RR Titus's Flyby-Landing Excursion Module proposal of 1966.
Weber, Capt. (USMC) (no first name given)

Ernesto Suarez
"The Lamplighter Legacy" (2013), short story Unknown September 15, 2021 / September 15, 2081
Weber serves as technical advisor for billionaire James Lamplighter's launch of self-replicating 3D printer to asteroid 4660 Nereus, where it builds technology for Mars mission. Teenage blogger Suarez later travels to Nereus; his family later settles on Mars.[195][196]
Tantalus base:
Charles Brunel (Canada) (Commander)
Kim Aldrich (UK) (Geologist)
Vincent "Vince" Campbell (USA) (Chief Systems Officer)
Lauren Dalby (UK) (Medic)
Richard "Harry" Harrington (UK) (Communications)
Robert Irwin (UK)
Rebecca Lane (UK) (Biochemist)
Marko Petrovic (Serbia)

Aurora relief team:
Unnamed astronauts
The Last Days on Mars (2013), film International Space Commission (ISC):

Aurora Mars Mission 2:
Aurora
Tantalus base
Aurora lander
Future
Martian explorers discover life, with disastrous results.[197][198]
Unnamed commander
Three unnamed astronauts
Mousetronaut Goes to Mars (2013), picture book NASA:
Galaxy Rocket
Mars landing craft
Near Future
Mouse named Meteor becomes first Earthling on Mars after landing craft engine fails, preventing human crew from landing. Sequel to Mousetronaut: Based on a (Partially) True Story (q.v.).[199]
Kirk "Andy" Anderson (Pilot)

Orbital Seven:
Drew Bantry (Commander)
Kristen Zhang
Unnamed personnel
"The Promise of Space" (2013), short story Spaceways:
Unknown (Mars missions)
Orbital Seven
c. 2030s – June 2051
Anderson, the first man on Phobos and veteran of two Mars missions, develops Alzheimer's-like symptoms after flying rescue mission to Orbital Seven during solar flare.[200][201]
Samuel Michaels, Capt. (Commander) Among the Stars (2014), short film Artemis-939 Future
Sole survivor of mission to establish life on Mars records final message in escape pod.[202]
Unnamed astronaut Delivery from Earth (2014), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut from Gallup, New Mexico is first person to give birth on Mars.[203]
Diomedes 1:
Mark Allen (Mission Commander)
Daniel "Dan" Pryor (Biosystems Engineer)
Emily Turner (Mars Module Pilot)
Delta-V (2014), short film NASA:
Project Diomedes
Near Future
Former space shuttle commander Allen is offered one-way flight to Mars.[204]
Shuttle 1:
Phil Miller (Pilot)
Steven Drake, Dr.
Last Sunrise (2014), short film Micronesia Unilateral Space Fund (MUSF):
RedThesis (Mars colony)
Shuttle 1
Shuttle 2
Phobos Base Control Center
Near Future
Astronaut from colony featured in reality TV show is running out of oxygen on Martian surface. Colony located in Hellas Planitia.[205]
Gloria "Glory Hallelujah" Hazeltine (Mission Commander)
Ernie Roebuck (Chief Communications Engineer)
Unnamed lead biologist
Unnamed astronauts

Excursion 3 (E-3):
Patrick "Pat" O'Connor (Team Leader)
Jacob "Jake" Bernstein (Geologist)
Rashid Faiyum (Geologist)
"Mars Farts" (2014), short story Unknown Late 21st century (after 2076)
After meteor shower, Excursion 3 team is stranded near Viking 2 landing site in Utopia Planitia. Mission base at Tithonium Chasma; Excursion 1 site near Olympus Mons.[206]
Melissa Lewis (Commander/Geologist)
Rick Martinez, Maj. (Pilot)
Chris Beck, Dr. (Physician/Biologist/EVA Specialist)
Beth Johanssen (Sysop/Reactor Tech)
Alex Vogel (Germany/European Union) (Chemist/Navigator)
Mark Richard Watney,[z] Ph.D. (Botanist/Mechanical Engineer)
The Martian (2014), novel; The Martian (2015), film NASA:

Ares 3:
Hermes
Mars Descent Vehicle (MDV)
Mars Ascent Vehicle (MAV)
2035
Sandstorm forces crew to evacuate landing site in Acidalia Planitia, leaving Watney, who is erroneously believed dead, stranded on Mars. In film Martinez is also member of Ares V crew.[aa][207][208][209]
Bart Saxby (NASA chief administrator)
Nathan "Nate" Brice (Flight Director)

Arrow:
Benson "Bee" Benson (Canada) (Command Pilot)
Ted Connover, Ph.D. (USAF) (Pilot)
Catherine Clermont, Dr. (France) (Geologist)
Virginia "Jinny" Gonzalez (Communications Specialist)
Amanda "Mandy" Lynn (USA) (Biologist)
Hiram "Hi" McPherson (Geologist)
Taki Nomura, Dr. (Japan) (Physician/Psychologist)
Mikhail "Mike" Prokhorov (Russia) (Meteorologist)
Rescue Mode (2014), novel NASA:

Arrow
Hercules (Mars lander)
Fermi (unmanned lander/surface habitation module)
August 2032 – December 2035
First manned Mars mission is imperiled by meteoroid impact. Saxby and Brice are former astronauts; Connover is an ISS and International Moon Base veteran. Launch from Earth orbit on April 5, 2035; landing on November 5, 2035, in Elysium Planitia.[210]
Ned Crater (Commander)
Flo Comet (Engineer)
Alex Nova (Lander Pilot)
Izzy Stardust (Science Officer)
Lem Cosmos (Engineer)
Space Quest: Mission to Mars (2014), picture book Space Quest:
Unnamed rocket
Ramesses
Memphis (Mars lander)
2050
Astronauts land on Mars as first stage of mission to explore Solar System. Landing near Valles Marineris.[211]
Unnamed commander
Tom Richwood, Sgt. Maj. (Pilot/Systems Engineering Specialist)
Rusham Haroun, Dr. (Bioscience Officer)
Angela Olvera
Mikhail Dankov
Castle
The Wrong Stuff (2015), TV
Mars 2018 Project:
Tenzing Norgay (simulator)
Contemporary
Navy and NASA veteran Richwood is murdered during simulation of privately funded mission to Martian northern lowlands.[212]
Samuel Ko "The Drones" (2015), short short story Unknown Future
First man on Mars arrives in shelter built by insect-like drones.[213]
T. Rymann
S. Hartley
Mars 299 792 458 m s 1 (2015), short film France December 9, 2034
Chaotic situation on Mars.[214]
Ed (no last name given) MARS-3 (2015), short film Mars X December 2, 1971 / 2038
Astronaut seeking to recover data from Soviet Mars 3 lander in Ptolemaeus Crater.[215]
Taylor Richards (Orbiter pilot)
"Hud" Hudson
Bowman
Red Mission (2015), short film Mars Red II (Recon Orbiter/Lander) July 19, 2053
After Hudson and Bowman make first manned landing on Mars, all three astronauts are abducted and placed in artificial Earth-like environment.[216]
Anuli (NASA) (M1)
Gil (ISSM)
Red Pearl (2015), short film Orion
International Space Station Mars (ISSM)
Mars habitat
2040
US astronaut who grew up in Nigeria explores rim of Victoria Crater. Space station is similar to ISS, but in Martian orbit.[217]
Phoenix:
Karie Chen (Commander)
Unnamed pilot
Three unnamed scientists

Pilgrim 2:
Daniel "Danny" Chen
Four unnamed astronauts

Pilgrim 3:
Karie Chen
Jonah Brennerman
James "Jim" Krueger
Treva Hilgar
"Tribute" (2015), short story NASA:
Phoenix
Pilgrim 1 (Mars habitat)
Pilgrim 2

Nova Branson Corporation:
Pilgrim 3
c. 2050
Deaths of Pilgrim 2 crew end manned spaceflight by NASA; Daniel Chen's sister Karie follows him to Mars on privately funded mission. Karie Chen previously commanded Phoenix mission to asteroid placed in lunar orbit. Krueger and Hilgar are former NASA astronauts.[218]
Zephyr:
William D. Stanaforth, Capt.

Boreas:
Emily Maddox, Capt.

Endurance:
Worsley (Captain)
Greenstreet (no first names given)
Approaching the Unknown (2016), film Romulus Mission:
Zephyr
Boreas

Endurance (space station)
Near Future
Astronauts on one-way trip to Mars in separate spacecraft.[219][220]
European Space Programme:
Angelo Chavez (US)
Marlon Habila, Dr. (Nigeria)

New Dawn:
Toby Soyinka (Second communications officer) (UK)
Unnamed astronauts

Second Wind:
Vinnie Cameron
Zhanna Sorokina
Ken Toh
Jocelyn Tooker
The Art of Space Travel (2016), novelette European Space Programme:
New Dawn
Hoffnung 3 (space station)

Second Wind
2047

c. 2077
New Dawn, launched for Mars in June 2047, exploded, killing its crew. Thirty years later, Second Wind crew prepares for second attempted Mars mission.[221]
Ben Sawyer (Mission Commander/Systems Engineer) (US)
Hana Seung (Mission Pilot/Systems Engineer) (US)
Marta Kamen (Geologist/Exobiologist) (Russia)
Robert Foucault, Ph.D. (Mechanical Engineer/Roboticist) (Nigeria)
Javier Delgado (Hydrologist/Geochemist) (Spain)
Amelie Durand (Mission Physician/Biochemist) (France)
Mars (2016), TV Daedalus 2033
Mission to establish first colony on Mars. Sawyer and Seung are NASA veterans.[222][223]
Achilles:
Lee Maynard, Lt Col. (Commander)
Emma Grant

Ares 5:
Francois (no last names given) [ab]
Shiela (no last names given) [ac]
4 unnamed astronauts
"Steel Eye" (2016), short story Ares Program:

Ares 4[ad]
Achilles

Ares 5

Equinox (Mars habitat)
Near Future
NASA astronauts on the first manned orbital mission to Mars, who find themselves faced with an agonizing choice when the engine that was supposed to allow their return to Earth fails.[224]
Theresa Clarke, Capt. (Canada) (Commander)
Dominique Henry, Dr. (OG-GYN) (US)
Li Rong, Dr. (China) (Planetologist)
Laima Miškinis (Lithuania)
Renata Romero (Mexico)
Seven unnamed astronauts
Aloysius Koch
Women Are from Mars (2016), web series The SisterShip Mars Colonizing Mission:
Deja Thoris [sic]
Near Future ("Stardate 7.3")
12-woman crew (six scientists, six civilians) on one-way trip to colonize Mars. Clarke is an experienced astronaut.[225]
Kate Winship (Geologist)
Ryan
Svetlana
Dave (no last names given)
Two unnamed astronauts
"Feldspar" (2017), short story NASA:
Eos
Future
First manned landing on Mars; Eos Base Camp established in mouth of Valles Marineris. Winship is injured near mouth of Maja Vallas on excursion to Chryse Planitia; Earth-based rover operator comes to her aid, guiding her to shelter near Dromore crater.[226]
MarsNOW:
Sergei Kuznetzov (Russia) (Co-Commander)
Helen Kane (US) (Co-Commander)
Yoshihiro "Yoshi" Tanaka (JAXA) (Co-Commander)

Backup crew:
Dev Patek (US)
Nora (US)
Ty (US) (no last names given for last two)

Weilai 3:
Yu Chen
Meifeng Guo
He Liu
Mingli Sheng
The Wanderers (2017), novel Prime Space
MarsNOW:
Eidolon (mission simulation)

Primitus (Earth-to-Mars vehicle)
Red Dawn (Earth Return Vehicle)
Red Dawn II (contingency ERV)

CNSA:
Weilai 3
Near Future
Astronauts undertake 17-month simulated Mars mission for private company; simulated landing near Arsia Mons. Meanwhile, Weilai 3 crew die in cockpit fire on way to Moon. All three members of MarsNOW prime crew are ISS veterans; Tanaka and former ISS commander Kuznetzov are NEEMO veterans. Former NASA astronaut Kane flew with cosmonaut named Yusef on her second ISS mission.[227]

Jupiter

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
K. "Fuj" Fuji (Japan)
F. Glenn (USA)
Invasion of Astro-Monster (a.k.a. Monster Zero) (1965), film World Space Agency[ae] (WSA):
Spaceship P-1
196X [sic]
Astronauts on mission to "Planet X", newly discovered satellite of Jupiter.[228][229][230]
Bramley, Capt.
Weeke (F/O)
Rand, Cmdr.
38 unnamed astronauts
Plague from Space (1965), novel Pericles Near Future?
Crew of the first mission to land on Jupiter. The sole survivor returns to Earth carrying a deadly disease. Revised as The Jupiter Plague (1982).[231]
David "Dave" Bowman, Dr. (Commander)
Frank Poole, Dr. (Co-Pilot)
Charles Hunter, Dr.
Jack R. Kimball, Dr.
Victor F. Kaminsky, Dr.
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), film/novel National Council of Astronautics (US):
Discovery One
1999 – 2001[af]
Astronauts on a mission to find an alien artifact near Jupiter (on Iapetus in the book, and Kimball was renamed Whitehead).[232][233][234][235]
Guy Crayford, Cmdr. Doctor Who
The Android Invasion (1975), TV
XK-5 Space Raider Contemporary/Near Future
UK Senior Space Defence astronaut vanished, presumed dead, on Jupiter mission. Saved by Kraal alien race who use him in their plans for invasion of Earth.
Alexei Leonov:
Tanya Kirbuk (Soviet Air Force) (Commander)
Vladimir Rudenko
Vasili Orlov, Dr.
Maxim "Max" Brailovsky
Irina Yakunina
Heywood R. Floyd, Dr.
R. Chandra, Dr.
Walter Curnow, Dr. (Engineer)

Tsien:
Chang, Professor (First name not given)
Lee, Dr. (First name not given)
Three unnamed astronauts
2010: Odyssey Two (1982), novel
2010 (1984), film
Alexei Leonov

Tsien (China)
2010
Astronauts on a follow-up mission to Jupiter to investigate the loss of Discovery One. Tsien makes disastrous first manned landing on Europa.[236][237]
Amity:
Mac McGuire
Marjorie "Marj" Aubuchon (Surgeon)
Ed Iseminger

Greenswallow:
Herman Selma (Mission commander)
Catherine "Cathie" Perth (Journalist)
Rob Sawyer

Tolstoi:
Victor Landolfi
Esther Crowley
Unnamed astronaut

Catherine Perth:
Ed Iseminger
Unnamed crew
Promises to Keep (1984), short story The Program:
Amity
Greenswallow
Tolstoi (three Athena vehicles)

Catherine Perth
Future (December)
Expedition to Jovian system in three linked vehicles. Catherine Perth, equipped with fusion engine, is built for rescue mission to be launched six years later. Frank Steinitz is named as commander of first Saturn expedition aboard five Athena vehicles (including Amity, Greenswallow and Tolstoi) fifteen years earlier.[238][239]
Jacob Hols
Juliet "Julie" Burton
Martha Kivelsen
The Very Pulse of The Machine (1998), short story First Galilean Satellites Exploratory Mission Future (Late 21st century?)
First manned landing on Io leads to major discoveries and tragedy. Landing site near Daedalus.[240][241]
Hachirota Hoshino
Werner Locksmith
Hakim Ashmead
Kho Cheng-Shin
Goro Hoshino
Planetes (2003), anime Von Braun 2075
First manned space mission to Jupiter.
Matthew David "Matt" (Commander) (no last name given)
Kara Elizabeth (Exobiologist) (no last name given)
Jeff "Wink" Winkermann
The Constellation of Sylvie (2005), novel NASA:
Heartland (CSM/LEM)
Near Future (2032 – 2040?)[ag]
First manned mission to Jupiter gathers ice containing biomorphing microbes from Jovian moon, causing crew to revert to childhood. Landing near Mount Pwyll.[242]
Kim Kronotska, Cmdr.
Tom Braudy
Samuel (no last name given)
Doctor Who
Memory Lane (2006), audio play
Led Zeppelin IV 2010s (?)
Commonwealth Space Programme mission to Jupiter that goes wrong.
Michael Forrest (Commander/Pilot)
Nathaniel "Nathan" Miller (Biologist/Geologist/Oceanographer/Doctor)
Astronaut: The Last Push (2012), film Moffitt Industries:
Life One
"Little Ahab" (submersible)
2017 – 2022
Mission to Europa with Venus gravity assist goes wrong when micrometeoroid strikes spacecraft.[243]
Dun "William" Xu (Commander)
Rosa Dasque (Pilot/Archivist)
Daniel "Dan" Luxembourg, Dr. (Chief Science Officer)
Katya Petrovna, Dr. (Science Officer)
Andrei Blok (Chief Engineer)
James Corrigan (Engineer)
Europa Report (2013), film Europa Ventures:
Europa One
Near Future
First manned mission to Europa discovers life under the ice. Landing in Conamara Chaos, near Thera Macula and Thrace Macula.[244]
Unnamed astronaut Voice Over (2013), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut trying to reach oxygen supply after crash landing, possibly on one of Jupiter's moons.[ah][245]
Gordon Harper, Ph.D. (Commander) (USAF)
Tal (Pilot/Physicist)
Nisha T. Devi (Engineer) (India)
Ivanov (Astrogeologist/Physician) (Russia)
"Sully" Sullivan, Ph.D. (Mission Specialist)
Thebes (Engineer) (South Africa)
Good Morning, Midnight (2016), novel Shuttle

Aether
Landing modules

International Space Station
Soyuz
Future (21st century)
Astronauts returning to Earth from Jupiter after losing contact with Mission Control; made landings on Ganymede and Callisto. Harper and Sullivan are ISS veterans; Harper holds world record for greatest number of spaceflights.[246]

Saturn

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Renaissance:
Shaun Geoffrey Christopher (a.k.a. Sean Geoffrey, Sean Jeffrey, Sean Jeoffrey), Col. (Commander)
Shirin Ludden, Cmdr. (Pilot)

Lewis & Clark:
Shaun Geoffrey Christopher (Commander)
Alice Fontana, Capt. (Canada) (Co-Pilot)
Marcus O'Herlihy, Dr.
Star Trek
Tomorrow Is Yesterday (1967), TV

Star Trek
The Rings of Time (2012), novel
Space Shuttle
Renaissance

U.S.S. Lewis & Clark
June 2020 – January 2021
The first "probe" to travel from Earth to Saturn.[247][248][249][250]
Steve West, Col. The Incredible Melting Man (1977), film Scorpio V Future
Astronaut whose physiology is horribly altered due to radiation exposure during the first mission to Saturn.[251]
Cirocco "Rocky" Jones, Capt. (Mission Commander)
Bill (Chief Engineer) (no last name given)
Calvin Greene, Dr. (Surgeon/Biologist/Ecologist)
Gaby Plauget (Astronomer)
April 15/02 Polo (Physicist)
August 3/02 Polo (Physicist)
Eugene "Gene" Springfield (Satellite Excursion Module Pilot)
Titan (1979), novel NASA
DSV Ringmaster
2025
NASA astronauts who discover alien artifact in orbit around Saturn. The Polo sisters are clones.[252]
Jean Broberg (Physicist)
Mark Danzig (Chemist)
Luis Garcilaso (Pilot)
Colin Scobie (Geologist)
The Saturn Game (1981), novella Moon lander c. 2057
Expedition from colony-size ship Chronos makes first manned landing on Iapetus, but is endangered by expedition members' absorption in a fantasy role-playing game.[253][254]

Uranus

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Eric Nilsson, Cmdr. (Denmark)
Donald "Don" Graham, Capt.
Karl Heinrich, Lt. Cmdr. (Astrogator)
Barry O'Neill (Ireland) (Communications Officer)
Svend Viltoft (Chief Engineer)
Journey to the Seventh Planet (1962), film United Nations:
Explorer 12
2001
Astronauts on Uranus encounter dangers drawn from their own minds.[255][256][257]
Unnamed astronaut The Old Astronaut (2014), short film NASA Future
Elderly veteran of missions to Mercury, Venus and Mars plots to crash spacecraft into Uranus.[258]

Neptune

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Event Horizon:
John Kilpack (Captain)
Chris Chambers
Ben Fender
Janice Reuben
Dick Smith

Lewis & Clark:
S.J. Miller, Capt.
M.I. Starck, Lt. (Executive Officer)
T.F. "Coop" Cooper (Rescue Technician)
D.J. (EMS/Trauma) (no last name given)
F.M. "Baby Bear" Justin (Engineering)
Peters (Medical Technician) (no first name given)
W.F. "Smitty" Smith (Pilot)
William "Billy" Weir, Dr. (IASA)

Rescue 1:
Unnamed crewmembers
Event Horizon (1997), film Daylight Station (space station)
Event Horizon

US Aerospace Command (U.S.A.C.):
Lewis & Clark
Rescue 1
2047
Event Horizon launched in 2040 on mission to Proxima Centauri with experimental "gravity drive"; disappears on January 23, 2040. The ship reappears in Neptune space in 2047; Lewis & Clark is sent to investigate. Dr. Weir was the Event Horizon's designer. Edmund "Eddie" Corrick, a bosun, served with Miller on the Goliath and was killed in an onboard fire.[259]

Asteroid/comet deflection

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Unnamed CSM/LM:
Thomas Alvar Nicols, Maj.
Van Druten
Riley (first names not given)

Enterprise:
Richard Bradford Ridge, Maj. (Commander)
David Priestly (Co-Pilot)
Marvin Leisen (Navigator)
Jim O'Toole
Archie Carfagno

Orpheus:
Thomas Alvar Nicols, Maj. (Co-Pilot)
Richard Bradford Ridge, Maj. (Pilot)
The Hermes Fall (1978), novel Apollo
Unnamed CSM/LM
Orpheus (CSM)

Space Shuttle
Enterprise
1980
A NASA moonflight veteran and the commander of the first space shuttle mission are sent on a desperate mission to prevent the asteroid Hermes crashing into the Earth.[260]
Floyd Hartwell
Andrew Bukowski, Capt. (Air Force Astronaut Wing)
Leonard Dmetriev (USSR)
Unnamed Chinese astronaut
Impact! (1979), novel Argonaut XX Contemporary?
International astronauts on a mission to prevent an asteroid impacting Earth.[261]
Marlena Glenn, Lt.

Spaceplane:
Mark Blaze, Col. (Commander)
Andrea Steele, Maj.
He-Man and the Masters of the Universe
Visitors From Earth (1984), TV
Spaceplane Future
Astronauts on mission to destroy "magnetic meteor" accidentally travel through wormhole to Eternia. Lt. Glenn had previously disappeared and become Queen of Eternia.[262]
NASA:
Murasaki
Terrence "the Trance"
Turginson
Woodside

Atlantis:
Boston "Boz" Low (Commander)
Ken Borden (Copilot)
Cora Miles (Mission Specialist)
Ludger Brink, Prof. (EEC) (Mission Specialist)
Maggie Robbins (Journalist)
The Dig (1995), video game/novel Space Shuttle
Atlantis
Near Future
Mission to stabilize orbit of mysterious asteroid. Low is a five-time shuttle veteran who made emergency landing aboard Enterprise. Scientist Brink spent months aboard space station Mir II.[263][ai]
Atlantis crew:
William Sharp, Col. (CMR)
Jennifer Watts (PLT)
Gruber (Nuclear Tech)
Charles 'Chick' Chapple
Max Lennert
'Rockhound'
Harry Stamper
Davis, Col. (CMR)
Tucker (PLT)
Halsey, Lt. (Nuclear Tech)
Oscar Choi
A.J. Frost
Jayotis 'Bear' Kurleenbear
Freddy Noonan
Lev Andropov
Armageddon (1998), film Space Shuttle
Atlantis

X-71 Military Space Shuttles:
Freedom
Independence

Mir (greatly expanded)
Contemporary
Atlantis destroyed by meteoroids preceding asteroid on collision course with Earth. X-71s each with 3 crew and 4 person drilling teams refuel at Mir, rescue Andropov from its destruction.[265]
Spurgeon "Fish" Tanner, Capt.
Oren Monash (Pilot)
Andrea "Andy" Baker
Gus Partenza, Dr.
Mark Simon
Deep Impact (1998), film Space Shuttle
Atlantis

Messiah
Near Future
Astronauts on mission to destroy an oncoming comet.[266]
Gus Malone (CAPCOM)

Unnamed astronauts
Nemesis (1998), novel Space Shuttle Contemporary
Astronauts on mission to deflect an oncoming asteroid.[267]
NASA:
Claire Daughenbaugh, Capt. (USN) (Physician/Rukh carrier aircraft crew)
Doug Waterhouse

Envoy:
Samson "Sam" Quinn, Gen.[aj] (USAF) (Commander)
Charles Stuart "Charley" Loomis, Cdre. (USN) (Second-in-command/Weapons officer)
John "Jack" Bernstein, Dr. (Physicist/Physician)
Stephen Edmunson, Maj. (USAF) (Weapons officer)
Martin "Marty" Tillery, Cmdr. (USN) (Engineer/Physicist)

Firebird:
May Sherbourne Wyndham (Pilot/Rocket scientist)
Mycroft Yellowhorse (aka William Connors; born Guillaume Olivier Connors) (JNAIT Council of Chiefs Director-at-large)
Tobias Desmond "Toby" Glyer, Dr. (Engineer/Physician)
Alice Johnson (Security consultant)
The Goliath Stone (2013), novel NASA:
Envoy (40-V air launch to orbit spaceplane)

Joint Negotiating Alliance of Indian Tribes (JNAIT):
Firebird (40-V air launch to orbit spaceplane)
June 2052
Crews racing to intercept asteroid being returned to Earth by nanites.[268]
Asteris:
James "Jim" Wheeler, Capt. (USMC)
Gordon, Dr. (Pentagon) (Physicist)
Clayton, Sgt. (Reconnaissance)
Cabrera, Cpl. (Demolitions)
Southard, Lt. (Communications)
Fitzpatrick (Pilot)
Sanchez (US Army) (Pilot)

Other SI-22s:
Magowan, Gen. (Pilot)
"Mac" McCanless, Col. (USAF) (Pilot)
Unnamed pilots
Age of Tomorrow (2014), film SI-22 Asteris [sp.?] (space shuttle)
Unnamed SI-22s
Contemporary/Near Future
Crew of mission to destroy asteroid is transported through wormhole to alien planet.[269]

Other

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Sky Masters, Maj. Sky Masters of the Space Force (1958–61), comic Unknown Near Future
Astronaut in the United States Space Force (USSF).
United States:
Edward "Ed" McCauley, Col.
William "Bill" Smith, Lt.
Lester Forsythe, Capt.
Donald Michaels, Capt.
Warnecke, Maj. (Dr.) (Physician)
William Thyssen, Dr. (Scientist)
Barrett, Capt.
Stacy Croydon, Dr. (Scientist)
Emory, Maj.
Draper, Capt.
Briggs, Maj.
Gibbie Gibson, Maj.
Bob Stark, Capt.
Horton, Dr. (Physicist)
Randolph, Dr. (Biologist)
Murphy, Lt. (Space Station Astra Executive Officer)
Hamilton, Dr. (Astronomer)
Stoner, Col.
Nick Alborg, Maj.
Bill Alborg, Lt. Col.
Art Frey, Lt.
Jerry Rutledge, Lt.
Franklin, Maj.
Williams, Capt.
Eden, Lt. (Navigator)
Paul Ellis, Maj. (Dr.) (Physician)
Muriel Catherine Gallagher, Dr. (Astronomer)
Caleb Fisk, Dr. (Astronomer)
Torrance Alexander, Dr. (Astronomer)
Arnold Rawdin, Dr. (Scientist)
Vern Driscoll, Lt. Col.
Summers, Maj. (Spacecraft commander)
Lewsham, Capt.
Johnny Farrow, Capt.
Swanson, Capt.
Bowyers, Maj.
Steven Hawkes, Maj. (Psychologist)
Thomas Ward, Capt. (Dr.) (Physician)
Canell, Maj. (Space Station Astra Executive Officer)
Fred Jones, Cpl.
Grinder, Sgt.
Saunders, Amn.
Luraski, Dr. (Geophysicist)
Ron Benson, Capt. (Communications Officer)
Hodges, Maj.
Bob King
"Tex" Nolan, Maj.
Others

UK:
Tom Hetherford, Grp Cpt (Vega commander)
Sopwith, Flt Lt (Vega co-pilot)
Neil Bedford-Jones, Lt (MR co-pilot)
Men into Space (1959–60), TV United States Air Force:
Space Station Astra
LX-318
0915
Skyra mission
Reentry tests
Tanker Able
R-101
S-107
Eclipse
M-13
L78-1 missions
MR-28
X-1000
TR-1

British National Space Agency (UK):
Project Vega
MR (rescue mission)
c. 1970–1980
Future astronauts build and crew space station and fly near-Earth missions, including landings on asteroids Skyra and L78-1.[1][2]
Lunar Base 1:
Lansfield, Col.
Beecher, Capt.
Cutler, Lt.
White, Lt.
Unnamed personnel

Pegasus 3:
Leonard, Capt. (Pilot)
Webb, Lt. (Navigator)

Pegasus 4:
Frank Chapman, Capt. (Pilot)
Ray Makonnen, Lt. (Navigator)
The Phantom Planet (1961), film United States Air Force:
Lunar Base 1
Pegasus 3 (Flight 361)
Pegasus 4
1980 (from March 16)
Astronauts who investigate mysteriously appearing planet Rheton.[270][271][272][273]
Dead astronauts:
Merril (1998)
Pokrovski (1999)
Connolly
Tkachev
Maiakovski
Brodisnek (no first names given)
Roger Woodward

Travis (no first/last name given)
The Cage of Sand (1962), short story Unknown 1998
1999
21st century
Seven dead astronauts orbiting Earth in their slowly reentering space capsules. Merril and Pokrovski failed to reach launching platforms in Earth orbit; Woodward died testing new launching platform. Travis was rookie astronaut for civilian company whose courage failed during launch countdown.[274][275]
United States:
Scott, Capt. (no first name given)
Unnamed astronaut
Unnamed sergeant

Eastern Space Patrol:
Vaslov, Maj. (no first name given)
Colormation Screen Test (1962), short film International Space Commission:
Wheel 4 (Space station)

Eastern Space Patrol:
Red Star Patrol
Near Future
US astronaut tells Congressional committee about recent events in space.[276]
Euro-American rocket:
George Larson (Captain)
Mike Fawsett (Vice-captain)
Tom Fiske (U.S. Army)
Uli Reinbach

Russo-Chinese rocket:
Nuri Bakovsky (Red Army) (Captain)
Ivan Kratov (Red Army)
Alexander "Alex" Pitoyan (Scientist)
Tara Ilyana
Fifth Planet (1963), novel Euro-American rocket

Russo-Chinese rocket
c. 2087 (May) – 2089
Rival missions to Achilles, the fifth planet of Helios, a star passing through Earth's solar system. Ilyana is the first woman in space.[277]
Clark Benedict, Maj. (Station Commander)
Mike Doweling, Capt.
Kenneth Gavin, Lt.
Gordon Halper, Lt. (Physician)
Rupert Lawrence Howard, Lt.
The Outer Limits
Specimen: Unknown (1964), TV
United States Air Force/Department of Space Travel
Project Adonis:
Space station
Shuttlecraft 1010 (Space Shuttle Flight 572-3XA)
Near Future
Space station crew imperiled by deadly alien plants.[278][279]
Zeus IV
Glyn Williams
Dan "Bluey" Schultz

Zeus V
Terry Cutler, Lt.
Doctor Who
The Tenth Planet (1966), TV
International Space Command (ISC):
Zeus IV
Zeus V
December 1986 (2000 in some sources)
Astronauts in Earth-orbital spacecraft similar to Gemini. Zeus IV explodes, killing Williams and Schultz; Zeus V had already been launched for rescue attempt.
Gary Jason, Col. Jigsaw (1966), comic book series Earth Space Force:
Stargazer One
Contemporary/Near Future
Astronaut injured in space is rescued by aliens and turned into the superhero Jigsaw.[280]
Unnamed astronaut Yonggary (1967), film NSRC (Republic of Korea):
Rocket #7X (one-man capsule)
Near Future
Korean astronaut on reconnaissance flight to monitor mid-East nuclear test.[281][282]
Valentina Prokrovna (Russia)

Robert Hamilton (USA)
The Dead Astronaut (1968), short story Unknown Near Future
Two of twelve dead astronauts left orbiting Earth in their respective spacecraft. Hamilton was carrying atomic weapon on military mission.[283][284]
P One
Morrison, Col.
Drew, Maj.
Hollis, Capt. (First names not given)

P Two
McCullough, Lt. Col.
Walters, Maj.
Berryman, Capt. (First names not given)
All Judgement Fled (1969), novel Prometheus Project
P One
P Two
Near Future
Astronauts dispatched to make first contact with an alien spacecraft.[285]
Andros V
Unnamed American astronauts

Zond 19
Unnamed Soviet cosmonauts
The Andromeda Strain (1969), novel Andros Project
Andros V

Zond Project
Zond 19
Near Future
Astronauts killed when the Andromeda organism destroys the heat shields of their spacecraft on re-entry.[286]
Bunny
Fred Hoffa
Other unnamed astronauts and technicians
The Long Twilight (1969), novel Unknown Near Future (c. 1996)
Astronauts aboard the United States Weather Satellite, who spot the abrupt beginnings of a hurricane-like storm.[287]
Remus:
Kindle (Captain)
Unnamed stewardess
Governor (Unnamed) (Passenger)
Lavinia Pickerell (Passenger)
11 unnamed passengers

Space station:
Aceworthy, Prof. (Weather department) (No first name given)
Terence (Animal experiments) (no last name given)
Unnamed personnel
Miss Pickerell and the Weather Satellite (1971), novel Tandem Space Shuttle (Booster ship[ak]/Remus [Orbital ship])

Space station
Near Future (Late Summer)
Miss Pickerell travels to space station to investigate malfunctioning weather satellite. Sequel to Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars and Miss Pickerell on the Moon (q.v.).[288]
William J. Lardner "Light Verse" (1973), short story Unknown Future (21st century?)
Widow of astronaut Lardner, who sacrificed himself to allow passenger ship to reach Space Station 5, unexpectedly commits murder.[289][290]
Beauregard "Beau" Jackson Land of the Lost
Hurricane (1974), TV
Hypersonic glider Near Future (c. 1990s)
During reentry, Jackson passes through time window into pocket universe.
William "Buck" Rogers, Capt. Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1979–81), TV Ranger 3 1987
NASA astronaut whose voyage in a Space Shuttle-like "deep space probe" results in suspended animation.
Unnamed Mission Specialist/Commander
Vollmer (Engineering/Communications/Weapons) (no first name given)
Human Moments in World War III (1983), short story Colorado Command:
Tomahawk II (Recon-Interceptor)
Near Future
Astronauts in Earth orbit come under control of Colorado Command rather than Houston after outbreak of World War III.[291][292]
Tank Farm:
Ralph Rutter, Dr. (Director)
Don Ishido, Dr. (Communications/Operations Chief)
Susan Sorbanes, Dr. (Business Manager)
Emily Testa (Italy)
Unnamed chief flight controller
Unnamed personnel

Pacifica:
Robert Bahnz, Col. (DOD)
Henry Woke, Dr. (NASA official)
Unnamed astronauts
Tank Farm Dynamo (a.k.a. Tank Farm) (1983), short story Colombo-Carroll Foundation:
Colombo Station (a.k.a. Tank Farm)

NASA:
Space Shuttle
Pacifica
c. 1999
Orbital platform built from Space Shuttle external tanks and run by American-Italian consortium faces takeover bid by US government.[293][294]
Joanne Davis, Maj.[al] (USAF) DEMON-4 (1984), novel NASA
Space Station
Near Future[am]
NASA astronaut who survived the destruction of her space platform during WWIII, reassigned to help in the destruction of a rogue undersea fortress.[295]
Evans (Captain)
Floyd (Engineer)
Grundy (Navigator) (no first names given)
Doctor Who
Search for the Doctor (1986), gamebook
Enterprise 21 space freighter August 2056
Three-man crew returning from satellite servicing mission disappears into Bermuda Triangle.[296]
Frances Reese
Jan DuToit
Bill Noyes
Mary Xu
Valentina Romanova
Mikhail Savchenko
Chuck Wenzel
Anna Cherneva
Yuri Finnegan
John Jackson
Gerry Wolf
Maria Blixen
Bertorelli
Perez
Saha
(First names not given for the last three characters)

Hipparchus Base:
Roger Bryant
Jim Russell
Hyashi Higuchi
Ben Templeton
Greg Able
Double Planet (1988), novel Space Shuttles
Ares I
Ares II
Discovery
Sir Fred Hoyle
Predpriyatie
Tsiolkovski

Moonbase
Hipparchus Base
Near Future
New Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA) astronauts and scientists on a mission to investigate the possibility of mining the Comet Osaki-Mori for resources the ReUnited Nations (RN) needs to rebuild Earth.[297]
Wayfarer 1
Theodore Ludendorff, Cmdr
Five unnamed astronauts

Wayfarer 2
Jake Ryder
Speed Spencer
Faye McFarland
Boris Mechanov
Ada Lin
Irwin Rote

Von Braun
Ki Susato
Unnamed astronauts
Reach (1989), novel Wayfarer Program
Wayfarer 1
Wayfarer 2

Space Station
Von Braun
2037–2040
When contact is lost with an expedition to a mysterious cluster of objects passing outside the orbit of Pluto a second expedition is sent to investigate.[298]
Unnamed astronaut The Village...the Village...the Earth...the Earth and the Suicide of the Astronaut (1995), short story "Space corporation" Unknown
After traveling around the Solar System, astronaut is unable to find work back on Earth.[299]
Channing Blythe Knowlton Eater (2000), novel NASA c. 2022 (February–July)
Former NASA astronaut dying of cancer volunteers to confront sentient black hole.[300]
Oliver Greenberg
Mike Weissman
Two unnamed astronauts
Open Loops (2000), short story NASA:
Ehricke
Near Future
On mission to Ra-Shalom, Space Shuttle veteran Greenberg becomes the first human to visit an asteroid. Greenberg later spends one million years living on Ra-Shalom while the universe changes around him.[301]
Unnamed astronauts Brando: Carbon Copies (2002), music video Unknown Future
Astronauts building space station to orbit distant planet which resembles Mars.[302]
Antonio (Mexico) (no last name given)
Unnamed astronaut
Will You Be an Astronaut? (2002), short story Space Station Vigilancia Unknown (Alternate History)
In alternate history in which Apollo 11 never returned to Earth, Antonio defends Earth from telepathic entities called Asps.[303][304]
Christopher Goszen The Memory Chamber (2006), short film SpaceCo 2019
Novelist-turned-astronaut confuses memories, dreams and reality while on mission to asteroid.[305]
Two unnamed astronauts An Inconvenient Penguin Death March (2007), short film Unknown Near Future
Astronauts stranded in space as penguins take over world.[306]
Carpathia:
Richard Jacob Johansenn
Susan Kirmatsu (Pilot)
Robbie Hamilton (Co-pilot)
Patricia Mattos (Chief archeologist)
Heidi Vogt (archeologist)
Unnamed astronauts and observers

Deep Space Dart:
Richard J. Johansenn
Mac McFerson
Greg Yovel
Rachel Saunders (Forensic anthropologist)
Helen Dail (Reporter)
Unnamed astronauts
Recovering Apollo 8 (2007), short story Johansenn Interplanetary:
Carpathia (Hawk-class)

Deep Space Dart
2007 (Alternate History)

2018 (Alternate History)

2020 (Alternate History)
In alternate history in which Apollo 8 never returned to Earth, billionaire Johansenn makes it his life's mission to recover the lost spacecraft and its crew. Apollo 20 is mentioned as having crashed into the Moon (no details given).[307][308]
Javier Fonseca, Dr. (Astrogeologist)

Endurance:
Neil Giffords, Dr. (US)
Yuri Semyonov, Dr. (Russia)
Glen Hosey, Dr. (Ireland) (Astrogeologist)
Spacemen Three (2008), short film Endurance (space shuttle) Future
Hosey replaces 11-spaceflight-veteran Fonseca on 24-month mission to gray planet that resembles Mars.[309]
Samuel Sheppard (Captain)
Jackson (Pilot)
Blake Santos, Dr. (Physician)
The Space Between (2009), short film Space Shuttle
Lustria
Near Future
NASA astronauts on nine-year mission using hibernation technology.[310]
NASA:
Robert "Rob" Danforth (USN)

Freedom:
Holly (Traffic control)
Unnamed personnel

Tri-Star:
Jake
Dan
Unnamed personnel
"Space Hero" (2010), short story NASA:
Space Shuttle
Discovery
Mars One

Soyuz

Freedom (space station)
Tri-Star (space station)
Orbital shuttle
Near Future
NASA astronaut Danforth, who made emergency landing aboard Discovery after launch malfunction, visits commercial space stations, one of which is building spacecraft for first Mars mission.[311][312]
Halcyon:
Arthur
Robert "Rob" (no last names given)
Capsule (2011), short film NASA:
Orion/Constellation
Halcyon (lander)
Unknown
Two astronauts in Halcyon have landed (possibly on Venus or Mars) and are running out of oxygen. The ending leaves ambiguous whether or not the story is a daydream.[313]
Unnamed cosmonaut (US?) The Cosmonaut (2011), short film Unknown Unknown
Cosmonaut returns from space to find his girlfriend has grown old and died.[314]
Windermere:
David Brock
Craig Swanson, Sqn Ldr (RAF)
Joanna "Jo" Slade

Jules Verne:
Philippe Lefevre, Commandant
Svenni Nilson
Doctor Who
The Feast of Axos (2011), audio play
Ironclad Industries:
Windermere

Eurozone Space Agency:
Jules Verne (shuttle)
Johann Kepler (shuttle)
c. 2020s[an]
Ironclad Industries attempts to solve Earth's energy problems by accessing energy from the alien parasite Axos.[315]
Markus Samuel Ditto, Cmdr. Imprint (2011), short film GSI:
Eco Mission (Space Shuttle)
Near Future
Astronaut creates holographic replica of himself rather than his wife as companion for journey beyond Mars.[316]
Galenka Makarova (Pilot)
Dimitri Ivanov (Data acquisition and transmission)
Yakov Demin (Flight systems specialist)
Troika (2011), novella Tereshkova
Soyuz re-entry vehicle
2039
Cosmonauts from revived Soviet Union investigate mysterious artifact in space. Tereshkova has VASIMIR drive.[317]
Oscar Homeslice The Ballad of Oscar Homeslice (2012), short film Unknown Contemporary
Legendary astronaut inspires young man to realize he is a hippogriff.[318]
Phoebe base (2020):
Lyman Hsu (Station Chief)
Tina "Tiny" Lundgren (Deputy Station Chief)
Gabriel "Gabe" Campbell (Geologist)
Thaddeus "Thad" Stankiewicz (Engineer)
Bryce Lewis
Alan Childs
Unnamed personnel

Phoebe base (2023):
Irv Weingart (Station Chief)
Thaddeus Stankiewicz (Deputy Station Chief)
Dino Agnelli (Electrical engineer)
Jarred Finnegan (Base mechanic)
Chuck (no last name given)
11 unnamed personnel

PS-1 Independent Inspection Team:
Marcus Judson (NASA contractor)
Olivia Finch, Prof. (Quality assurance engineer)
Savannah "Savvy" Morgan (USAF, civilian) (Computer security engineer)
Reuben Swenson (Department of Energy) (Power systems engineer)
Energized (2012), novel NASA:

Phoebe base
Powersat One (PS-1)
February 22, 2020

April 10 – November 4, 2023
When asteroid Phoebe approaches Earth, NASA captures it and places it in Earth orbit to investigate its resources. Stankiewicz is blackmailed into secret project, leading to his murdering Campbell during EVA on Phoebe to avoid discovery. Three years later, inspection team investigates newly constructed powersat.[319]
Thom (Netherlands?) (no last name given) Tears of Steel (2012), short film Unknown Future
Thom's decision to become an astronaut causes his girlfriend Celia to create killer robots that take over the world. Remade in Chinese in 2013.[320][321]
Charlotte Hayden, Dr. (Senior Mission Commander)
Jack Overholt, Col. (Military Commander)
Gabriel Drum, Maj. (Military Executive Officer)
Alberto Gomez, Lt. (Physician)
Manesh Kalani, Dr. (Linguist/Computer Specialist)
Donald "Don"[ao] Pritchard, Dr. (Chief Astronomer)
Cary Rowan, Dr. (Geologist)
Kyoko Takahashi,[ap] Dr. (Physician)
John S. Willett, Sgt. (OSCAR Corps) (Chief Engineer)
Letter 44 (2013– ), comic book series Project Monolith (US):
USS Clarke
Bowman (shuttle)
c. 2009
Astronauts on secret mission to investigate alien artifact in asteroid belt. Drum, Gomez and Pritchard discover lush artificial environment on 730 Athanasia.[322][323]
Jack Corben, Capt. Superman Family Adventures
The Menace of Metallo! (2013), comic book
Unknown (United States) Contemporary/Near Future
Astronaut transformed into super-villain Metallo by encounter with kryptonite asteroids.[aq][324][325]
Walsh, Dr. (Commander)
Tom Compton, Ph.D. (Pilot)
Bartholomew Alan "Berg" Bergen, Ph.D. (Engineer)
Ronald "Ron" Gibbs, Ph.D.
Jane Augusta Holloway, Ph.D. (Linguist)
Ajaya Varma, M.D. (Flight Surgeon)
Fluency (2014), novel NASA
Alpha Mission:
Providence
Future (21st century)
Astronauts dock with alien spacecraft discovered by Mariner 4 in 1964 and monitored by NASA ever since. Gibbs is an ISS veteran.[326]
Katie Sparks
Blair Taylor
Marcus Dawkins

Seraphim:
Harmon Kryger

Seraphim:
Molly Woods
Extant (2014–2015), TV International Space Exploration Agency (ISEA):
Space Station
Seraphim
Near Future (2030s/2040s)
Woods returns from 13-month solo mission to find herself pregnant. Sparks, Taylor and Dawkins are deceased; Kryger was believed to have committed suicide after mysterious solar flare incident.[327]
Nebulon "Lon" Innes Airtight (2015), short story Bezospace:
MK212
Future (after 2035)
Former lunar ferry pilot stakes claim to minor planet in order to sell it to corporation. MK212 spacecraft described as "second-generation Dragon capsule".[328]
Dark Sky Station:
Felix (Detective)
Aouda (Flight Chief)
Charlie (Maintenance)
Unnamed personnel

Orbital ascender:
Unnamed pilot
Unnamed flight engineer
Phil Foggerty (Passenger)
John Keyes (Passenger)
Around The NEO in 80 Days (2015), short story Dark Sky Station (DSS) (Inflatable space habitat)
2 orbital ascenders (Space balloons)
Future
Adventurer Foggerty and valet Keyes attempt to win bet by flying around near-Earth object.[329]
Chinese spacecraft:
Song-li "Song" Chunxi

Private spacecraft:
Sam Gunn
Rare (Off) Earth Elements (A Sam Gunn Tale) (2015), short story People's Republic of China

Private spacecraft (fusion propulsion)
Future
Taikonaut travels to asteroid 94-12 to claim its resources for China, only to find Sam Gunn already there.[330]
Kenna Belecky (Outer Space Technician)
Nick (Outer Space Technician) (no last name given)
Ten Days Up (2015), short story McCormick-Dewey International:
McCormick-Dewey ground-to-orbit lifting conduit ("the EL") (Space elevator)
Future
Solar flares hit space elevator train while "ostech" Belecky is performing EVA. Haley Wu is mentioned as having been the first human on Mars.[331]
Tombaugh One/Tombaugh Station:
James Dayton (Commander)
Kate Beck (Executive Officer)
Tadeo "Cookie" Atsuka, Dr. (Data Analytics and Imaging)
Elise Kenyata, Dr. (Geo-planetologist/Medical Officer)
Robinson
Tucker (no first names given for last two)
Tombaugh Station (2015), short story Corporate:
Tombaugh One
Tombaugh Two
Tombaugh Three
Tombaugh Station
Future
Mysterious deaths on Pluto prior to completion of Venetia Burney Deep Space Cassegrain Telescope.[332]
Tyrille Smith A Walkabout Amongst The Stars (2015), short story Venturer 2035
When Voyager 1 mysteriously reactivates, Aboriginal Australian astronaut is sent on NASA/international mission to investigate. Venturer consists of seven nuclear electric propulsion modules.[333]
Space Now:
Malcolm "Mal" Pennington (Founder)

NASA:
Dennis Locke[ar] (Program Director)

Cronus candidates:
Barney
Peter Jensen (UK) (Space Now)
Meredith Korman (call sign Braniac) (Theoretical physicist)
Stephen Miller (EU)
Eleven unnamed candidates

First Cronus mission:
Jason "Ace" McCoy (NASA) (Commander)
Hemi "Thor" (NASA) (Second-in-command)
Antonio Curzon (call sign Playboy) (Space Now) (Payload Specialist)
Isabelle "Izzy" Wolsten (call sign Bombshell) (NASA) (Payload Specialist)
Bomber
Vicki Crum
Hennessey (Theoretical physicist)
Lourdes
Mike
Dean Winters (call sign Frosty)

Second Cronus mission:
Velosi (call sign Velocity) (NASA) (Commander)
Nine other astronauts
Beyond the Limits (2017), novel NASA/Space Now/International programs:
Cronus program (Shuttle/Space station)
Near Future (April – June)
Astronauts competing for slots on missions to build way station between Earth and Mars. Wolsten and Crum are ISS veterans. Billionaire Pennington attempted rendezvous with satellite aboard solar balloon, then set space diving world record on way down.[334]
Jacob "Jake" Lawson (Satellite designer)
Ute Fassbinder (Space station commander)
Geostorm (2017), film Space station Near Future
Engineer Lawson on climate-control satellite repair mission.[335][336][337]
Planetary Resources and Exploration:
Hiroshi Nevitt

Barrick-Vale:
Theresa (no last name given)
"To Lose the Stars" (2017), short story Planetary Resources and Exploration

Barrick-Vale Mining and Exploration Corporation
2047

Late 21st century
On solo survey expedition in the asteroid belt, Brazilian freelance surveyor Theresa discovers the dead body of legendary surveyor Nevitt.[338]

To infinity and beyond

These are astronauts performing or attempting feats beyond the capabilities of the present or near future, such as interstellar travel.

Name(s) Appeared in Program / mission / spacecraft Fictional date
Alexei Pavlovich Zarubin, Capt. (Commander)
Nikolai (Engineer)
Nina (Engineer)
Georgi (Navigator)
Lena (Physician)
Sergei (Astrophysicist) (no last names given for last five)
"The Astronaut" (1960), short story Polus Future (late 20th or early 21st century)
On the first expedition to Barnard's Star, Zarubin sacrifices himself to save his crew. Zarubin and Sergei previously landed together on Saturn's moon Dione.[339]
Gresham (no first name given)
Unnamed astronaut
The Twilight Zone
The Invaders (1961), TV
United States Air Force
Space Probe No. 1
Future
USAF astronauts discover life on alien planet.[340][341][342]
Reed Richards
Susan "Sue" Storm
Jonathan "Johnny" Storm
Benjamin Jacob "Ben" Grimm
Fantastic Four (1961–present), comic Experimental interstellar spacecraft[as] Contemporary
Private space venture; astronauts bizarrely affected by cosmic rays.[343]
Steve Zodiac, Col.
Matthew Matic, Prof., Venus
Fireball XL5 (1962), TV Fireball XL5 2062
Commander of the Fireball XL5 of the World Space Patrol.
Max Landin, Cmdr. (Conn watch)
Edward "Ed" Haverson (Watch officer)
William "Will" Berger (Watch medic)
Three unnamed crewmembers
"The Samaritan" (1963), short story Unknown (Interstellar vessel) Future
Crew of humanity's first interstellar vessel encounters aliens in distress. Landin was a member of one of the first crews to orbit the Earth.[344][345]
Larry Dart, Capt.
Slim, Husky
Space Patrol (1963), TV Space Patrol 2100
Commander of Galasphere 347 of the Space Patrol.
Paul Ross, Capt.
Theodore "Ted" Mason, Lt.
Michael "Mike" Carter, Lt.
"Death Ship" (1953), short story

Twilight Zone
Death Ship (1963), TV
Rocket Bureau:
E-89
1997
Spacecraft crew crashes on distant planet; they have difficulty accepting their own deaths. (In short story Carter is named "Mickey".)[346][347][348]
Unnamed cosmonaut "El cosmonauta" (aka "The Cosmonaut") (1964), short story Unknown Future
Cosmonaut has fatal encounter with intelligent beings on alien planet.[349][350]
Douglas Stansfield, Cmdr. Twilight Zone
The Long Morrow (1964), TV
Unknown Future
Astronaut placed in suspended animation for forty-year mission.[351][352]
Faith 1:
Unnamed astronauts

Hope 1:
Hank Stevens (Commander)
John Andros
Paul Martin (Scientist)
Lisa Wayne (Scientist)
Space Probe Taurus (a.k.a. Space Monster) (1965), film Earth Control:
Faith 1
Hope 1
2000
Hope 1 astronauts on mission to planet Taurus in Triangulum Galaxy.[353]
Zefram Cochrane Star Trek: The Original Series
Metamorphosis (1967), TV

Star Trek: First Contact (1996), film
Phoenix 2063
First use of warp drive by an Earth vessel in the Star Trek timeline.
George Taylor, Col.
Dodge
Landon
Stewart
Planet of the Apes (1968), film Icarus 1972
ANSA astronauts on an interstellar mission, perhaps to Bellatrix.[354]
Robert O'Bannion
Andrei Voronov
Carlos Pascual
May Connearney
Sidney Lee
Doris McNerty
Aaron Hatfield
Jerry Grote
Chen Shu Li
Alicia Montiverdi
Lou D'Orazio
Marlene Ettinger
Other unnamed astronauts
As on a Darkling Plain (1972), novel Unknown Near Future
Astronauts on missions to Jupiter and Sirius.[355]
Prometheus-1, Prometheus-3:
Bud Williams, Jr.

Prometheus-5:
Stony Stevenson, Pvt./Cpl. (Hon.) (US Army)
Between Time and Timbuktu (1972), TV movie Mission Control:
Prometheus-5 (Gemini-like)
Near Future (March – December)
Jingle contest winner Stevenson is launched into space and through time warp. Former astronaut Williams flew to Mars on one of the earlier Prometheus missions.[356]
Fredric Michael "Fred" Kelly
Steen (no first name given)
Unnamed astronauts
"Kelly, Fredric Michael" (aka "Kelly, Fredric Michael: 1928-1987", "Kelly, Fredric Michael (1928-1990)") (1973), short story Unknown c. 1987
Astronauts on early mission using "warps" to reach another galaxy have their minds drained by alien force.[357]
Tom Trimble Unidentified Flying Oddball (a.k.a. The Spaceman and King Arthur, A Spaceman in King Arthur's Court) (1979), film NASA:
Stardust 1
Contemporary/Near Future
NASA technician Trimble is accidentally launched aboard faster-than-light spacecraft and travels back in time to Arthurian era.[358]
Ed Westin, Col./Gen.
O'Keefe, Capt. (no first name given)

Solo 1/Solo 2:
Mark Devore, Capt.
Time Warp (1981), film NASA:
Solo 1
Solo 2
1984 – July 13, 1985 / July 13, 1986
While returning from a one-year mission to "the farthest reach of the galaxy", Solo 1 passes through a time warp, sending Devore one year into the future.
NASA:
Donald Hotchkiss, Capt. (Prof.)
Mary Washburn

Moon mission:
"Hoop" Hooper

Mars mission:
Amanda Jaworski (USAF) (Commander)
Sue Ann O'Riley (Copilot)

Soviet Union:
Solipsovich
Zayatin Zamayt
The Eleven Million Mile High Dancer (1985), novel NASA:
Moon mission
Mars mission
1986
Mars-bound astronaut Jaworski is caught up in a series of bizarre events, leading her to travel to Epsilon Erdani (sic) in search of her lost cat.[359]
Bartholomew Mann (Physicist)
Terry Waters, Maj.
Paul St John, Dr.
Philip Quincy-Jones
Luciano Cragnolini
Unnamed commander
The Quiet Place (1987), novel Unknown Near Future
Crew of the first manned interstellar spacecraft who return to find the Earth changed beyond recognition.[360]
Volopas:
Miroslav Gurov (Team leader)
Dennis Averianov
Sasha Lapushkin

Shuttlecraft:
Antonov
Elissa
"A Birch Tree, A White Fox" (1989), short story Space Survey Corps:
Volopas

Geological Institute:
Nevski
Shuttlecraft
Future
Cosmonauts crash-land on distant planet where speaking aloud means death.[361]
Stephen G. Richey (Col.), Commander
Unnamed crewmembers
Star Trek: The Next Generation
The Royale (1989), TV
NASA:
Charybdis
July 23, 2037 – 2044
Third manned expedition outside Solar System results in Richey dying in captivity on alien planet.[362][363]
Floyd G. Nevish (Commander) Cosmic Wormholes: The Search for Interstellar Shortcuts (1992), non-fiction book Jovian Industries Future
Astronaut on mission into Kerr-type rotating black hole.[364]
Commander
Scientist/First Mate
Space Twin 1
Space Twin 2
The Voyage (1992), opera Space station
Spacecraft
2092
"Several years later"
Archeologists discover "directional crystals" brought to Earth by ancient astronauts, causing instruments on a space station crewed by Space Twins 1 and 2 to pinpoint the aliens' origin. Several years later, Space Twins 1 and 2 join crew of generational voyage to aliens' planet.[365]
Olshavsky (Captain) (no first name given)
Clio Trigorin (Historian)
Sanetomo Kawamura (Astronomer)
27 unnamed crewmembers
Encounter with Tiber (1996), novel Tenacity July 20, 2069 – 2081
Humanity's first starship, built with alien technology, on a voyage to Alpha Centauri.[29]
Adventurer:
Badquor, Capt. (Sc.D.)
John (Astronomer)
Lissa (Atmospheric chemist)
Odis
Tagore (Theorist)
Unnamed geologist
Unnamed crewmembers

Second expedition:
Unnamed crew
"A Dance to Strange Musics" (a.k.a. "A Pit Which Has No Bottom") (1998), short story Adventurer

Second expedition (unnamed starship)
Future (21st century?)[at]
Adventurer, the first manned starship, makes bizarre discoveries on planet in Alpha Centauri system. A second expedition investigates some years later.[366][367]
Henry Forbes

Unnamed co-pilot of Congreve (UK)

Unnamed Discovery crew members
"The Wire Continuum" (1998), short story Mustard (Multi-Unit Space Transport and Recovery Device)
Congreve

Endeavour

Discovery
1947-2017 (Alternate History)
RAF World War II veteran and rocket pioneer in alternate history in which teleportation was developed in the 1950s. Forbes makes first manned landing on Moon in Oceanus Procellarum with Buzz Aldrin and Alexei Leonov in 1977, leaves solar system aboard first starship Discovery in 1997.[368][369]
John Cope
Five unnamed astronauts
Cold Fusion (1999), novel Argos Program
Argos 2
Near Future
Crew of the first manned expedition to another solar system.[370]
Clark Kent, Lt. JLA: Earth 2 (2000), graphic novel Unknown Contemporary (Antimatter universe)
Alternate universe equivalent of Superman was originally astronaut injured in hyperspace accident.[371]
Franz Daxenberger, Dr.
Dirk Mandelbrot, Dr. Dr. [sic]
Space Zoo (2001), short film ESA (Bavaria):
Stoiber (Research station)
2030
Astronauts on space station in Earth orbit travel to Aldebaran 5 due to use of hyperspace module.[372]
Astronaut One
Astronaut Two
Astronauts (2005), short film Unknown Future
Comic misadventures of two astronauts on distant space mission.[373]
Charles T. "Chuck" Baker, Capt. Planet 51 (2009), film Odyssey (command module)
Lander
c. 2026 (April)
NASA astronaut captured by aliens on distant planet.[374]
Tully, Capt. (Commander) (no first name given)
Unnamed copilot
Unnamed crewmembers
Superman: Deep Space Hijack (2010), chapter book S.T.A.R. Labs:
Long Range Space Explorer
Rescue ship
Unknown
Astronauts returning from mission outside solar system crash-land on Pluto.[375]
Sam (no last name given) (England)
Unnamed crewmembers
Capsule (2011), short film Unknown Future
Young man floats in escape pod after spacecraft explodes in deep space. Spacecraft was launched from Houston.[376][377]
Lino Martinez (later known as "Otim")
Ilen
Unnamed astronauts
Góry Parnasu (a.k.a. The Mountains of Parnassus) (2012), novel Astronauts' Union Late 21st century
Married couple on journey to planet Sardion aboard spacecraft traveling at 99.5% of lightspeed.[378]
Traveler (unnamed) Grounded (2012), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut has bizarre experiences after crashing on extrasolar planet.[379]
Joseph Wood Hibernation (2012), short film Somnus I 20th-21st centuries?
Wood is placed into hibernation for 50-year mission.[380]
Francisco Delagurez

Bon Accord:
Etienne Larochelle (RCAF), Cmdr
Moire Cameron (USAF), pilot
Michiko
Other unnamed astronauts
The Long Way Home (2012), novel Bon Accord (XS-312) Future[au]
Crew of an experimental interstellar mission to Beta Centauri and beyond whose spacecraft suffers a major malfunction on the return journey. Delagurez took part in a later exploratory mission.[381]
Unnamed astronauts The Pod (2012), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut crashes on planet and must make dangerous journey back to spacecraft.[382]
House of Secrets:
Aune (Finland)
Gwenda (US?)
Mei
Portia
Sisi (South Africa/US)
Sullivan (US) (no last names given)
Five unnamed astronauts (not in revision)

House of Mystery:
Twelve unnamed astronauts (number not specified in revision)
"Two Houses" (2012, revised 2015), short story Original:
Light House (nicknamed The House of Secrets)
Leap Year (nicknamed The House of Mystery)

Revision:
Seeker (nicknamed House of Secrets)
Messenger (nicknamed House of Mystery)
March 12, 2073 (original)

After 2059 (revision)
Astronauts in intermittent hibernation on voyage to Proxima Centauri, launched in summer 2059. House of Mystery disappears in flight.[383][384]
Unnamed astronaut XY (2012), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut encounters apparition of woman on distant planet.[385]
Unnamed astronaut Azarkant (2013), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut on deep space mission explores mysterious spacecraft.[386]
Lila Suvlu, Dr. (Commander)
Unnamed astronaut
Futurestates
Children of the Northern Lights (2013), TV
Exoterra Energy:
S. V. Kluguya (Exploration Vessel 0032-A)
Future
Husband-and-wife astronauts crash on distant planet while searching for new energy sources.[387]
Adam Fossy, Maj. Infinite (2013), short film Unknown Future
Fossy hibernates aboard spacecraft for infinite length of time while waiting for discovery of extraterrestrial intelligence.[388]
Three unnamed astronauts Mission Control (2013), short film NASA/Russian Space Agency:
Icarus
Near Future
International mission to explore Kepler-22b faces prospect of fatal explosion after liftoff.[389]
Sally Pascal, Capt. I Am Here (aka The Journey of Sally Pascal) (2014), short film USS Vision Quest (Anthro-Robotic spaceship):
Solo Journey
Future
Trainee pilot attempting to reach wormhole for return to Earth.[390]
Lazarus missions:
Hugh Mann, Dr.
Wolf Edmunds
Laura Miller
Wong, Dr.
Hale, Dr.
Morin, Dr.
Yashin, Dr.
Lee, Dr.
Oita, Dr.
Ostro, Dr.
Pila, Dr.
Somov, Dr.

Endurance:
Joseph "Coop" Cooper (Pilot)
Amelia Brand, Dr.
Doyle
Nikolai "Rom" Romilly (Astrophysicist)
Interstellar (2014), film/novel NASA:

Lazarus missions (12 Ranger spaceplanes)

Endurance (incorporates 2 Rangers)
Future (21st century)
Astronauts travel through wormhole near Saturn to distant galaxy in search of new home for humanity, which is in danger of extinction.[391][392][393]
Astronaut 35
Astronaut 41
Astronaut 42
Project Skyborn (2014), short film Unknown Unknown
Mysterious events on moon of ringed planet.[394]
Unnamed astronaut Lone (2015), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut aboard faster-than-light ship searching for life on planet 1200 light years from Earth.[395]
James Morrison, Cmdr. (UK) Superluminal (2015), short film Unknown Future
Young astronaut discovers life on alien moon.[396]
Unnamed astronaut RunCatRun (2016), short film Unknown Future
Astronaut traveling through wormhole switches bodies with cat.[397]
Unnamed astronaut "The Astronaut" (2017), short story Unknown Future
Astronaut stranded on distant planet seeks bat-like creature in order to make antidote for poisoned bite.[398]

TV commercials

Name(s) Appeared in Program / Mission / Spacecraft Fictional date
Five unnamed astronauts Specsavers
Shuttle (2011), TV commercial
Space Shuttle Contemporary
Shuttle crew land at Luton Airport instead of Cape Canaveral.[399]
Paul (no last name given) One A Day
Astronaut (2014), TV commercial
Unknown Contemporary
Astronaut who takes One A Day vitamins.[400]
Two unnamed astronauts
Unnamed janitor
Volkswagen
Astronaut (2014), TV commercial
Unknown Contemporary/Near Future
Astronaut is replaced by janitor while using restroom.[401]
Unnamed astronauts BMW
Astronaut (2015), TV commercial
Space Shuttle Contemporary
Astronaut launching aboard space shuttle is impressed by BMW 6 Series.[402]
Joost (no last name given)
Yuri (no last name given)
Unnamed American and Japanese astronauts
Heineken
Nature's Wonder (2015), TV commercial
International Space Station Contemporary
A Dutch astronaut's attempt to celebrate a comrade's birthday creates an artificial aurora.[403]
The Most Interesting Man in the World
Two unnamed astronauts
The Most Interesting Man in the World: Rolls, Rotates, Rowing and Rockets (2015), TV commercial Unknown Contemporary
The Man plays video game with fellow astronaut aboard spacecraft.[404]
International Space Station:
Two unnamed astronauts

Soyuz:
Two unnamed cosmonauts[av]
Slim Jim
Space Chase (2015), TV commercial
International Space Station
Soyuz (Capsule 7)
Contemporary
Docking of Soyuz with ISS delayed by American astronauts' enjoyment of Slim Jims.[405][406]
Unnamed astronaut (Cmdr.) Audi
Commander (2016), TV commercial
Mercury
Apollo
Contemporary
An elderly veteran of the Mercury and Apollo programs is impressed by Audi R8.[407][408]
Unnamed astronaut Dollar Shave Club
One Small Shave For Man (2016), TV commercial
International Space Station? Contemporary
Astronaut praises Dollar Shave Club.[409]
Three unnamed astronauts Hyundai
Extreme Boldness (2016), TV commercial
Space Shuttle
VRT-487
Contemporary
Crew of crashed space shuttle is rescued by Hyundai Elantra driver.[410]
Two unnamed American astronauts
Unnamed Russian cosmonaut
letgo
Space Station (2016), TV commercial
International Space Station (GEO mission) Contemporary
During space station emergency, astronaut sells amplifier to cosmonaut via mobile app.[411]
The Most Interesting Man in the World
Unnamed astronaut
The Most Interesting Man in the World: Adios Amigo 'Mission to Mars' (2016), TV commercial Unknown Contemporary/Near Future
The Man leaves Earth on one-way mission to Mars.[412][413]
The Most Interesting Man in the World The Most Interesting Man in the World: Meet the New Most Interesting Man in the World (2016), TV commercial Unknown Contemporary
Among the new Most Interesting Man's exploits is landing a space capsule.[414][415]
Unnamed astronaut Snapple
TEAcision (2016), TV commercial
International Space Station Contemporary
Astronaut punctures his spacesuit with "I VOTED" button.[416]
Six unnamed crewmembers[aw] Toyota
Mars (2016), TV commercial
Mars Simulation Facility (MSF-1T) Contemporary
James Marsden, driving Toyota RAV4 Hybrid, assists "enthusiast" crew of Mars analog habitat.[417]

Astronauts in other media

Several toy astronaut dolls and action figures were produced in response to the popularity of astronauts in the 1960s. Most of them had no associated storylines. They included:

  • Johnny and Jane Apollo, 1968 plastic toys with accessories including a "Moon Rover".
  • Barbie, the world's most popular doll, was released with a variant space suit costume in the 1960s.
  • Billy Blastoff, an apparently juvenile astronaut of the 1960s.
  • The Major Matt Mason line of toys from 1968, including Major Mason himself, Lt. Jeff Long, Sgt. Storm, and Doug Davis.[418]
  • Moon McDare, a generic astronaut figure from 1965, packaged with various accessories.
  • John Blackstar, Earth astronaut who crashes on planet Sagar.[419]

Notes

  1. ^ Also called "Mac" by some characters.
  2. ^ Appears in episode "Christmas On the Moon".
  3. ^ Chapter 2 (the X-21 flight) may take place c. 1967, since it refers to Earth orbital satellites "as much as ten years aloft" (p. 30).
  4. ^ Described as an "Astronautical test engineer"
  5. ^ Part of the Soviet Space Squadron.
  6. ^ Main character states the events related in the book begin on January 16, 1978.
  7. ^ Year incorrectly given as "2012" on jacket flap of Asking for the Moon.
  8. ^ Although supposedly Earth's Moon, the planet has an atmosphere and an extra planet in the sky.
  9. ^ According to "Goddard's People", Ares One landing site is in Utopia Planitia.
  10. ^ Referred to as both "Atlas V" and "Saturn V" throughout the book (cf. p. 241).
  11. ^ Last names not given for the final three crew members.
  12. ^ Dialog indicates the story takes place more than 35 years after the last manned Moon landing.
  13. ^ Marsha is omitted in Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women, in which "Marsha" is the code name of Earth control.
  14. ^ The ship corresponding to Sirius can be seen to be named Typhoon in one shot due to the use of stock footage from Nebo Zovyot (q.v.).
  15. ^ Appears in episode "Mission To Mars"; not the same character as Jim Nichols from "Christmas On the Moon".
  16. ^ Appears in episode "Flight To the Red Planet"; not the same character as Nichols from "Christmas On the Moon" or "Mission To Mars".
  17. ^ The book is inconsistent about whether Trasker's middle initial is "H." or "C." Cf. pp. ix and 71.
  18. ^ Also called "Jazzbo" by close friends.
  19. ^ The plotline is very heavily influenced by The Quatermass Experiment and Who Goes There?
  20. ^ Referred to in the novel as an Astronette, the author's term for a female astronaut.[132]
  21. ^ F.X. Woolf is a pseudonym for authors Howard Engels & Janet Hamilton.
  22. ^ Last name not confirmed; "Odinga" is wife's surname.
  23. ^ The mission is discussed as a recent event in the clip show The Voice of Reason, which has a contemporary setting.
  24. ^ Listed as Max "Bull" Haber in closing credits.
  25. ^ Beaden and his wife married in 2024.
  26. ^ Middle name given in film only.
  27. ^ According to Andy Weir on the film's DVD commentary, the Chinese astronaut aboard Ares V is named "Wei".
  28. ^ Dropped from mission to allow Maynard/Grant to return on Ares 5.
  29. ^ Dropped from mission to allow Maynard/Grant to return on Ares 5
  30. ^ Comprises an Orion command module, an Endurance habitation module and an Earth Return Engine.
  31. ^ "World Space Authority" in American version.
  32. ^ According to opening sequence of 2010 film.
  33. ^ Pages 136 and 184 possibly imply that the book ends 123 years after 1917.
  34. ^ One of the planets in the sky appears to be Ganymede.
  35. ^ An earlier version of the game by Brian Moriarty featured an additional character named Toshi Olema, a paying passenger on the mission.[264]
  36. ^ Stated to be a "two-star general" (p. 13) and a "Brigadier General" (a one-star rank) (p. 204).
  37. ^ Not stated to be a manned booster.
  38. ^ Promoted to Lt Col. at the novels conclusion.
  39. ^ Exact year is not specified, but references to extensive orbital infrastructure suggest a time in the late 20th/early 21st C relative to the date of publication.
  40. ^ The story is set fifty years after The Claws of Axos.
  41. ^ Also called "Pritch".
  42. ^ Incorrectly named "Kyoko Takamura" in Volume 1 crew portrait caption (p. 155).
  43. ^ This origin story for Metallo differs from other versions, in which Corben is not an astronaut. See the Metallo article.
  44. ^ Not explicitly stated to be an astronaut.
  45. ^ According to The Fantastic Four #2, Richards' crew was trying to reach Mars.
  46. ^ Story takes place "more than a century into the dual evolution of society and computers" on Earth.
  47. ^ Story proper takes place in 2115. Moire's mission is described as taking place "...80 years and some change..." prior to this year.
  48. ^ Surnames end with "glu" and "zin".
  49. ^ Not stated to be actual astronauts.

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