List of first satellites by country
Appearance
	
	
(Redirected from Timeline of first artificial satellites by country)
As of 30 October 2025, over eighty countries have operated artificial satellites.
| Denotes international organisations | |
| Denotes countries formerly part of another country which already had a spacecraft in orbit | |
| Denotes countries with disputed sovereignty or recognition and autonomous dependent territories | 
| Country | Satellite | Operator | Manufacturer | Carrier rocket[1] | Launch site[1] | Date (UTC)[1] | Remarks | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|  Soviet Union | Sputnik 1[2] | OKB-1 |  OKB-1 |  Sputnik 8K71PS |  Baikonur | 4 October 1957 | First satellite launched | 
|  United States | Explorer 1[3] | ABMA |  JPL |  Juno I RS-29 |  Cape Canaveral | 1 February 1958 | |
|  United Kingdom | Ariel 1[4] | RAE |  NASA /  SERC |  Thor DM-19 Delta |  Cape Canaveral | 26 April 1962 | |
|  Canada | Alouette 1[5] | DRDC |  DRDC |  Thor DM-21 Agena-B |  Vandenberg | 29 September 1962 | |
|  Italy | San Marco 1[6] | CNR |  CRA[6] |  Scout X-4 |  Wallops | 15 December 1964 | |
|  France | Astérix[7] | CNES |  CNES |  Diamant A |  Hammaguir | 26 November 1965 | |
|  Australia | WRESAT[8] | WRE |  WRE |  Sparta |  Woomera | 29 November 1967 | |
| 10 European countries 
 | ESRO 2B[9] | ESRO |  Hawker Siddeley[9] |  Scout B |  Vandenberg | 17 May 1968[10] | |
|  West Germany | Azur[11] | DLR |  DLR /  NASA |  Scout B |  Vandenberg | 8 November 1969 | |
|  Japan | Ohsumi[12] | ISAS |  ISAS |  Lambda-4S |  Kagoshima | 11 February 1970 | |
|  People's Republic of China | Dongfanghong I[13] | CAST |  CAST |  Chang Zheng 1 |  Jiuquan | 24 April 1970 | |
|  Netherlands | ANS[14] | SRON / NASA |  Philips |  Scout D-1 |  Vandenberg | 30 August 1974 | |
|  Spain | Intasat[14] | INTA |  Standard Electrica |  Delta 2310 |  Vandenberg | 15 November 1974 | |
|  India | Aryabhata[14] | ISRO |  ISRO |  Kosmos-3M |  Kapustin Yar | 19 April 1975 | |
|  Indonesia | Palapa A1[14] | Perumtel |  Hughes |  Delta 2914 |  Cape Canaveral | 8 July 1976 | |
|  Czechoslovakia | Magion 1[14] | IAP |  IG |  Kosmos-3M |  Plesetsk | 24 October 1978 | |
|  Bulgaria | Bulgaria 1300[14] | BSA |  Bulgarian Academy of Sciences |  Vostok-2M |  Plesetsk | 7 August 1981 | |
|  Saudi Arabia | Arabsat-1A | Arabsat |  Aérospatiale | Ariane 3 |  Kourou | 8 February 1985 | |
|  Brazil | Brasilsat A1[14] | Embratel |  Hughes | ||||
|  Mexico | Morelos 1[14] | SCT |  Hughes |  Space Shuttle Discovery |  Kennedy | 17 June 1985 | Deployed using PAM-D during STS-51-G | 
|  Sweden | Viking | SSC |  Boeing/  Saab | Ariane 1 |  Kourou | 22 February 1986 | |
|  Israel | Ofek-1 |  IAI |  Shavit |  Palmachim | 19 September 1988 | ||
|  Luxembourg | Astra 1A | SES Astra |  GE Astrospace | Ariane 44LP |  Kourou | 11 December 1988 | |
|  Argentina | Lusat | AMSAT Argentina | Ariane 40 |  Kourou | 22 January 1990 | ||
|  Hong Kong | AsiaSat 1 | AsiaSat |  Hughes |  Chang Zheng 3 |  Xichang | 7 April 1990 | Hong Kong, a British Overseas Territory, became part of the People's Republic of China in July 1997 | 
|  Pakistan | Badr-1 | SUPARCO |  SUPARCO |  Chang Zheng 2E |  Xichang | 16 July 1990 | |
|  Russia | Kosmos 2175 |  |  Soyuz-U |  Plesetsk | 21 January 1992 | Successor state to the Soviet Union | |
|  South Korea | Kitsat-1 | KAIST |  SSTL | Ariane 42P |  Kourou | 10 August 1992 | |
|  Portugal | PoSAT-1 | PoSAT |  SSTL | Ariane 40 |  Kourou | 26 September 1993 | |
|  Thailand | Thaicom-1 | Shin Satellite |  Hughes | Ariane 44L |  Kourou | 18 December 1993 | |
|  Turkey | Turksat 1B | Türksat |  Aérospatiale | Ariane 44LP |  Kourou | 10 August 1994 | |
|  Czech Republic | Magion 4 | IAP |  IAP |  Molniya-M |  Plesetsk | 2 August 1995 | Formerly part of Czechoslovakia | 
|  Ukraine | Sich-1 |  Tsyklon-3 |  Plesetsk | 31 August 1995 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union | ||
|  Chile | FASat-Alfa |  SSTL | Failed to separate | ||||
|  Malaysia | MEASAT-1 | MEASAT |  Hughes | Ariane 44L |  Kourou | 13 January 1996 | |
|  Norway | Thor 2 | Telenor |  Hughes |  Delta II 7925 |  Cape Canaveral | 20 May 1997 | |
|  Philippines | Mabuhay (Agila 1) (former Palapa B2P) | Mabuhay |  Delta-3920 |  Cape Canaveral | 20 March 1987 | Originally operated and launched for Indonesian company PT Pasifik Satelit Nusantara. Acquired while on orbit by Mabuhay in 1996 making it the first Philippine owned satellite. | |
| Mabuhay 1 (Agila 2) |  SS/Loral |  Chang Zheng 3B |  Xichang | 19 August 1997 | First Philippine satellite to be launched from space | ||
|  Egypt | Nilesat 101 | Nilesat | Astrium | Ariane 44P |  Kourou | 28 April 1998 | |
|  Singapore  Taiwan | ST-1 | SingTel Chunghwa | Astrium | Ariane 44P |  Kourou | 25 August 1998 | |
|  Taiwan | Formosat-1 | NSPO |  TRW |  Athena I |  Cape Canaveral | 27 January 1999 | |
|  South Africa | SUNSAT | Stellenbosch |  Stellenbosch |  Delta II 7920 |  Vandenberg | 23 February 1999 | Launched on same rocket as first Danish satellite | 
|  Denmark | Ørsted | DMI[15] |  CRI[15] | Launched on same rocket as first South African satellite | |||
|  Georgia[16] | Reflektor | Energia-GPI Space |    Energia-GPI Space |  Soyuz-U |  Baikonur Site 1/5 | 17 July 1999 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union | 
|  United Arab Emirates | Thuraya 1 | Thuraya |  Boeing |  Zenit-3SL |  Odyssey | 21 October 2000 | |
|  Belgium | PROBA-1 | ESA |  Verhaert Space |  Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle |  Satish Dhawan | 22 October 2001 | |
|  Morocco | Maroc-Tubsat |  TU Berlin |  Zenit-2 |  Baikonur | 10 December 2001 | ||
|  Tonga | Esiafi 1 (formerly Comstar D4) | TONGASAT |  SS/Loral |  Atlas SLV-3D Centaur-D1AR |  Cape Canaveral | 21 February 1981 | A private American satellite that transferred ownership to Tonga in April 2002 | 
|  Algeria | AlSAT-1 |  SSTL |  Kosmos-3M |  Plesetsk | 28 November 2002 | ||
|  Greece | Hellas-Sat 2 | Hellas-Sat | Astrium |  Atlas V 401 |  Cape Canaveral | 13 May 2003 | |
|  Nigeria | NigeriaSat-1 |  SSTL |  Kosmos-3M |  Plesetsk | 27 September 2003 | ||
|  Iran | Sina-1 |  NPO Polyot |  Kosmos-3M |  Plesetsk | 27 October 2005 | ||
|  Kazakhstan | KazSat-1 |  Khrunichev |  Proton-M/DM3 |  Baikonur | 17 June 2006 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union | |
|  Colombia | Libertad-1 |   |  Dnepr |  Baikonur | 17 April 2007 | ||
|  Mauritius | Rascom-QAF 1 | Rascom |  Alcatel | Ariane 5GS |  Kourou | 21 December 2007 | |
|  Vietnam | Vinasat-1 | Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group |  Lockheed Martin | Ariane 5ECA |  Kourou | 18 April 2008 | |
|  Venezuela | Venesat-1 |  CAST |  Chang Zheng 3B/E |  Xichang | 29 October 2008 | ||
|  Afghanistan | Eutelsat 48D / Afghansat 1 | Afghanistan Ministry of Communications and Information | EADS Astrium |  Ariane 5ECA |  Kourou | 20 December 2008 | Satellite leased to the Afghanistan Ministry of Communications and Information in January 2014 | 
|  Switzerland | SwissCube-1 |  |  PSLV-CA |  Satish Dhawan | 23 September 2009 | ||
|  Singapore | X-Sat |  SATREC |  PSLV-C |  Satish Dhawan | 20 April 2011 | ||
|  Isle of Man | ViaSat-1 | ViaSat-IOM, ManSat, Telesat-IOM |  SS/Loral |  Proton-M/Briz-M |  Baikonur | 19 October 2011 | Isle of Man is a Crown Dependency of the British sovereign | 
|  Hungary | MaSat-1[17] |  BME | Vega |  Kourou | 13 February 2012 | ||
|  Poland | PW-Sat[17] | Warsaw University of Technology, Space Research Centre | Deorbit on 28 October 2014 | ||||
|  Romania | Goliat[17] |   | |||||
|  Belarus | BelKA-2[18][19] |  |  Soyuz-FG/Fregat |  Baikonur | 22 July 2012 | ||
|  North Korea | Kwangmyŏngsŏng-3 Unit 2[20] | KCST |  |  Unha-3 |  Sohae | 12 December 2012 | Failed to operate in orbit | 
|  Azerbaijan | Azerspace-1/Africasat-1a[21] | Space Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan (Azercosmos) |  Orbital Sciences | Ariane 5ECA |  Kourou | 7 February 2013 | Independent since 1991 | 
|  Austria | TUGSAT-1/UniBRITE[22] |  UTAIS |  PSLV-CA |  Satish Dhawan | 25 February 2013 | Austria's first two satellites were launched together | |
|  Bermuda | Bermudasat 1 (former EchoStar VI) | Bermudasat |  SS/Loral |  Atlas IIAS |  Cape Canaveral | 14 July 2000 | Bermuda is a British Overseas Territory; Bermudasat 1 (former private American EchoStar VI) satellite was transferred in April 2013 to Bermuda being at orbit | 
|  Ecuador | NEE-01 Pegaso[23] | EXA |  EXA |  Chang Zheng 2D |  Jiuquan | 26 April 2013 | |
|  Estonia | ESTCube-1 |  | Vega |  Kourou | 7 May 2013 | Estonia was formerly part of the Soviet Union. | |
|  Jersey | O3b-1/O3b-2/O3b-3/O3b-4 | O3b Networks |  Thales Alenia Space |  Soyuz-STB/Fregat-MT |  Kourou | 25 June 2013 | Jersey's first four satellites were launched together. Jersey is a Crown Dependency of the British sovereign | 
|  France  Qatar | Eutelsat 25B / Es'hail 1 | Eutelsat Es'hailSat |  SS/Loral | Ariane 5ECA |  Kourou | 29 August 2013 | Qatar's first satellite flew as a joint project with the French corporation Eutelsat | 
|  Qatar | Es'hail 1 | Es'hailSat |  SS/Loral | Ariane 5ECA |  Kourou | 29 August 2013 | Full ownership of the joint France-Qatar satellite Eutelsat 25B / Es'hail 1 was sold to Es'hailsat in 2018[24] | 
|  Peru | PUCP-Sat 1 |  |  Dnepr |  Dombarovsky | 21 November 2013 | ||
| Pocket-PUCP | |||||||
|  Bolivia | Túpac Katari 1 |  CAST |  Chang Zheng 3B/E |  Xichang | 20 December 2013 | ||
|  Lithuania | LitSat-1/Lituanica SAT-1 |  |  Antares 120 |  MARS LP-0A | 9 January 2014 | The first two Lithuanian satellites were launched together; both carried to the International Space Station and deployed later in the year. Lithuania was formerly part of the Soviet Union. | |
|  Iraq | Tigrisat | MOST / La Sapienza |  La Sapienza |  Dnepr |  Dombarovsky | 19 June 2014 | |
|  Uruguay | ANTELSAT | ANTEL |  UdelaR | ||||
|  Turkmenistan | TurkmenAlem52E/MonacoSAT | TNSA |  Alcatel |  Falcon 9 |  Cape Canaveral | 27 April 2015 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union. | 
|  Laos | Laosat-1 | Laos National Authority for Science and Technology |  CAST |  Chang Zheng 3B/E |  Xichang | 20 November 2015 | |
|  Finland | Aalto-2 | Aalto University |  Aalto University |  Atlas V 401 |  Cape Canaveral | 18 April 2017 | |
|  Bangladesh | BRAC ONNESHA | BRACU |  Kyushu Institute of Technology |  Falcon 9 Full Thrust |  Kennedy | 3 June 2017 | Launched on same rocket as first Ghanaian and Mongolian satellites | 
|  Ghana | GhanaSat-1 | All Nations University | Launched on same rocket as first Bangladeshi and Mongolian satellites | ||||
|  Mongolia | Mazaalai (satellite) | National University of Mongolia | Launched on same rocket as first Ghanaian and Bangladeshi satellites | ||||
|  Latvia | Venta 1 | Ventspils University College |  Ventspils University College |  PSLV-CA |  Satish Dhawan | 23 June 2017 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union, Launched on same rocket as first Slovakian satellite | 
|  Slovakia | skCUBE | SOSA |  SOSA | Formerly part of Czechoslovakia, Launched on same rocket as first Latvian satellite | |||
|  Angola | AngoSat 1 | AngoSat |  RSC Energia |  Zenit-3F / Fregat-SB |  Baikonur | 26 December 2017 | Launch was successful but contact was lost quickly afterwards.[25] On 28 December 2017, communication was restored and telemetry was received.[26] | 
|  New Zealand | Humanity Star | Rocket Lab |  Rocket Lab |  Electron |  Rocket Lab Launch Complex 1 | 21 January 2018 | First satellite launched by New Zealand launcher. | 
|  Costa Rica | Proyecto Irazú | Costa Rica Institute of Technology |  Costa Rica Institute of Technology |  Falcon 9 |  Cape Canaveral | 2 April 2018 | First satellite of Central America. Manufactured in Costa Rica.[27] | 
|  Kenya | 1KUNS-PF | University of Nairobi | University of Nairobi  | Launched on same rocket as first Costa Rican satellite. | |||
|  Bhutan | Bhutan 1 | Bhutanese students under Kyutech-led second Joint Global Multination Birds Project (Birds-2) |  Kyushu Institute of Technology |  Falcon 9 Full Thrust |  Cape Canaveral | 29 June 2018 | |
|  Jordan | JY1-SAT | Jordanian students under the Crown Prince Foundation |  Falcon 9 Full Thrust |  Vandenberg | 3 December 2018 | ||
|  Nepal | NepaliSat-1 | NAST for Nepal Academy of Science and Technology |  Kyushu Institute of Technology |  Antares 230 |  MARS LP0A | 17 April 2019 | |
|  Sri Lanka | Raavana 1 | Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Modern Technologies |  Kyushu Institute of Technology | ||||
|  Rwanda | RWASAT-1 | Rwanda Utilities Regulatory Authority | Rwandan engineers with support from the  University of Tokyo |  H-IIB |  Tanegashima Space Center Yoshinobu Launch Complex | 24 September 2019 | Decay from orbit 27 April 2022 | 
|  Sudan | Sudan Remote Sensing Satellite 1 (SRSS-1) | Sudan | ISRA |  Long March 4B |  Taiyuan Satellite Launch Centre LC-9 | 3 November 2019 | |
|  Ethiopia | Ethiopian Remote Sensing Satellite 1 (ETRSS-1) | Ethiopia |  Ethiopia Ethiopian Space Science and Technology Institute |  Long March 4B |  Taiyuan Satellite Launch Centre | 20 December 2019 | |
|  Guatemala | Quetzal-1 | Universidad del Valle de Guatemala |  Guatemala Students from the Universidad del Valle de Guatemala |  Falcon 9 |  Cape Canaveral SLC-40 | 7 March 2020 | |
|  Slovenia | TRISAT | University of Maribor | University of Maribor | Vega |  Kourou | 3 September 2020 | Launched on same rocket as first Monégasque satellite. | 
| NEMO-HD | Space-SI | UTIAS / Space-SI | |||||
|  Monaco | OSM-1 Cicero | Orbital Solutions Monaco |  Orbital Solutions Monaco | Launched on same rocket as first two Slovenian satellites. | |||
|  Paraguay | GuaraniSat-1 | Paraguayan Space Agency and Kyutech-led fourth Joint Global Multination Birds Project |  Kyushu Institute of Technology |  Antares 230 |  MARS LP0A | 20 February 2021 | Launched on same rocket as first Myanma satellite. | 
|  Myanmar | Lawkanat-1[28] | Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University |  Hokkaido University /  Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University | Launched on same rocket as first Paraguayan satellite. | |||
|  Tunisia | Challenge-1 | Telnet Tunisie | Telnet Tunisie |  Soyuz-2.1a / Fregat |  Baikonur Site 31/6 | 22 March 2021 | |
|  Kuwait | QMR-KWT | Orbital Space Kuwait | Orbital Space Kuwait |  Falcon 9 |  CCSFS SLC-40 | 30 June 2021 | |
|  Bahrain  United Arab Emirates | Light-1 | New York University Abu Dhabi | Engineers from Bahrain's space agency, NSSA, in collaboration with  Khalifa University |  Falcon 9 |  CCSFS | 21 December 2021 | Bahrain's first satellite flew as a joint project with the UAE Space Agency | 
|  Armenia  Spain | ARMSAT_1 | Satlantis / Geocosmos | Satlantis |  Falcon 9 |  Cape Canaveral SLC-40 | 25 May 2022 | Joint satellite between Satlantis and Geocosmos | 
|  Moldova | TUMnanoSAT | Technical University of Moldova | Technical University of Moldova |  Falcon 9 |  Kennedy LC-39A | 15 July 2022 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union | 
|  Uganda | PearlAfricaSat-1 | Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation | Kyushu Institute of Technology |  Antares |  MARS LP-0A | 7 November 2022 | Launched on the same rocket as the first Zimbabwean satellite | 
|  Zimbabwe | ZIMSAT-1 | Zimbabwe National Geospatial and Space Agency | Kyushu Institute of Technology | Launched on the same rocket as the first Ugandan satellite | |||
|  Albania | Albania-1 | State Authority for Geospatial Information |  Satellogic |  Falcon 9 |  Cape Canaveral SLC-40 | 3 January 2023 | First Albanian satellites, launched as a pair | 
| Albania-2 | |||||||
|  Macau | Macao Science-1A | Macau University of Science and Technology |  Macau University of Science and Technology |  Long March 2C |  Jiuquan LA-4 | 21 May 2023 | First Macanese satellites, launched as a pair | 
| Macao Science-1B | |||||||
|  Vatican City  Italy | SpeiSat | Dicastery for Communication/ASI |  ASI |  Falcon 9 |  Vandenberg SLC-4E | 12 June 2023 | Joint satellite between the Italian Space Agency and the Vatican Dicastery for Communication | 
|  Oman | AMAN-1 | ETCO |  SatRev |  Falcon 9 |  Vandenberg SLC-4E | 11 November 2023 | Launched on the same rocket as the first Djiboutian satellite | 
|  Djibouti | Djibouti-1A | University of Djibouti |  University of Montpellier | Launched on the same rocket as the first Omani satellite | |||
|  Armenia | Hayasat-1 | Bazoomq Space Research Laboratory |  Bazoomq Space Research Laboratory, Center of Scientific Innovation and Education |  Falcon 9 |  Vandenberg SLC-4E | 1 December 2023 | Formerly part of the Soviet Union. Launched on the same rocket as the first Irish satellite | 
|  Ireland | EIRSAT-1 | University College Dublin |  University College Dublin | Launched on the same rocket as the first Armenian satellite | |||
|  Senegal | GAINDESAT-1A | SenSat |  University of Montpellier |  Falcon 9 |  Vandenberg SLC-4E | 16 August 2024 | |
|  Croatia | CroCube | Društvo EVO |  EVO/  Spacemanic[29] |  Falcon 9 |  Vandenberg SLC-4E | 21 December 2024 | |
|  Botswana | BOTSAT-1 | Botswana International University of Science and Technology | EnduroSat |  Falcon 9 |  Vandenberg SLC-4E | 15 March 2025 | 
Suborbital only
[edit]In addition, some countries have only attained a suborbital spaceflight, and have yet to launch a satellite into orbit.
| Country | Payload | Carrier rocket | Launch site | Date (UTC) | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
|  Lebanon[30] | ARZ-3 |  Ceadar-3 |  Dbayeh | 21 November 1962 | 
|  Yemen[31] | Warhead |  Burkan-2 |  Sa'dah | 4 November 2017 | 
|  Sealand[32] | Postcard |  New Shepard |  Corn Ranch, Launch Site One | 13 October 2020 13:36 | 
|  British Antarctic Territory[33] | Postcard |  New Shepard |  Corn Ranch, Launch Site One | 14 January 2021 16:57 | 
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log". Jonathan's Space Page. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ Zak, Anatoly. "Sputnik's Mission". RussianSpaceWeb. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ "Explorer 1". Milestones of Flight. Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ "Timeline: 1960s". Space Research: 50 Years and Beyond. University of Leicester. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ "Alouette I and II". Canadian Space Agency. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
- ^ a b Russo, Arturo (2002). The Century of Space Science. Vol. 1. Springer. p. 52. ISBN 0-7923-7196-8.
- ^ Kramer, Herbert J. (2002). Observation of the Earth and Its Environment: Survey of Missions and Sensors. Springer. p. 160. ISBN 3-5404-2388-5.
- ^ Williamson, Mark (2006). Spacecraft Technology: The Early Years. Institution of Engineering and Technology. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-86341-553-1.
- ^ a b "ESA Achievements" (PDF). European Space Agency. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
- ^ "ELDO/ESRO/ESA: Key Dates 1960-2013". European Space Agency. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
- ^ "When did the first German satellite go into space?". DLR. 23 November 2009. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ "Ohsumi". Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. Archived from the original on 11 May 2013. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ Long, Wei (25 April 2000). "China Celebrates 30th Anniversary Of First Satellite Launch". Space Daily. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "First Time in History". The Satellite Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ a b Ørsteds Resultater [Results of the Ørsted satellite] (PDF) (Technical report) (in Danish). Copenhagen: Danish Meteorological Institute. 1 March 2002. ISSN 0906-897X. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 October 2023. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
- ^ "Reflektor".
- ^ a b c "Central and Eastern Europe Make History with Small Satellites". European Space Agency. 13 February 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ Krebs, Gunter. "BKA (BelKa 2)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ "Belarus' first satellite enters orbit". Xinhua. 24 July 2012. Archived from the original on 27 July 2012. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ Fisher, Max (12 December 2012). "Real-time satellite tracker shows precise location of North Korea's new satellite". Washington Post. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ Agayev, Zulfugar (8 February 2013). "First Azeri Satellite Launched, Two More Planned in 2015-2016". Bloomberg. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ "AUSTRIAN SATELLITES: BRITE-AUSTRIA & UniBRITE". BRITE-Constellation. Universität Wien. Archived from the original on 24 March 2013. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ Barbosa, Rui C. (26 April 2013). "China back in action with Long March 2D launch of Gaofen-1". NASASpaceflight.com. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
- ^ "Es'hailSat Makes Deal with Eutelsat to Fully Own Satellite - Via Satellite -". Via Satellite. 10 August 2018.
- ^ Krebs, Gunter. "AngoSat 1". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
- ^ "Источник: со спутником "Ангосат" восстановлена связь". ТАСС.
- ^ "Costa Rica Launches Its First Satellite Into Space with SpaceX". The Costa Rica Star. 2 April 2018. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
- ^ "Lawkanat 1, 2". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
- ^ https://www.spacemanic.com/missions/crocube/
- ^ "Cedre 3". astronautix. Archived from the original on 28 December 2016. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
- ^ "Burkan 2H". astronautix. Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
- ^ "Sealand stamps blasted into space". 13 November 2020. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
- ^ "NEW SHEPARD MISSION NS-14 CARRIES MORE THAN 50,000 POSTCARDS TO SPACE FROM 13 COUNTRIES". 14 January 2021. British research station in Antarctica 
