API endpoint that allows a flight of a specific Spacecraft instances to be viewed.

GET:
Return a list of all the existing Spacecraft flights.

FILTERS:
Parameters - 'spacecraft'
Example - /api/2.0.0/launcher/?spacecraft=37

GET /2.0.0/spacecraft/flight/156/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 156,
    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/spacecraft/flight/156/?format=api",
    "mission_end": "2002-10-18T15:44:00Z",
    "destination": "International Space Station",
    "launch_crew": [
        {
            "id": 2153,
            "role": "Commander",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 461,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/461/?format=api",
                "name": "Jeffrey Ashby",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1954-06-16",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": "https://twitter.com/Jeffrey_S_Ashby",
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Jeffrey Shears \"Bones\" Ashby is an American mechanical engineer, and former naval officer and aviator, test pilot and NASA astronaut, a veteran of three Space Shuttle missions. He is a retired Captain in the U.S. Navy. He currently works for Blue Origin as chief of mission assurance.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/jeffrey_ashby_image_20220911034133.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Ashby",
                "last_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z",
                "first_flight": "1999-07-23T04:31:00Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 2090,
            "role": "Pilot",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 472,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/472/?format=api",
                "name": "Pamela Melroy",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1961-09-17",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": "https://twitter.com/Astro_Pam",
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Pamela Anne Melroy is a retired United States Air Force officer and a former NASA astronaut. She served as pilot on Space Shuttle missions STS-92 and STS-112 and commanded mission STS-120 before leaving the agency in August 2009. After serving as Deputy Program Manager, Space Exploration Initiatives with Lockheed Martin, Melroy joined the Federal Aviation Administration in 2011, where she was a senior technical advisor and director of field operations for the FAA's Office of Commercial Space Transportation.\r\n\r\nIn 2013, she left the FAA and joined DARPA as Deputy Director of the Tactical Technology Office. She left the agency in February, 2017.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/pamela_melroy_image_20220911033725.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamela_Melroy",
                "last_flight": "2007-10-23T15:38:19Z",
                "first_flight": "2000-10-11T23:17:00Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 2157,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 509,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/509/?format=api",
                "name": "Piers Sellers",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 6,
                    "name": "Died While In Active Service"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1955-04-11",
                "date_of_death": "2016-12-23",
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Piers John Sellers OBE was a British-American meteorologist, NASA astronaut[1] and Director of the Earth Science Division at NASA/GSFC. He was a veteran of three space shuttle missions. Sellers attended Cranbrook School, Cranbrook, Kent, United Kingdom, until 1973, and achieved a bachelor's degree in ecological science from the University of Edinburgh in 1976. In 1981 he gained a doctorate in biometeorology from the University of Leeds. In 2011, Sellers retired from the NASA Astronaut Corps.\r\n\r\nBefore joining the astronaut corps, Sellers worked at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on research into how the Earth's biosphere and atmosphere interact. This work involved climate system computer modelling and field work utilising aircraft, satellites and ground support input.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/piers_sellers_image_20220911033612.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piers_Sellers",
                "last_flight": "2010-05-14T18:20:00Z",
                "first_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 2162,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 502,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/502/?format=api",
                "name": "Sandra Magnus",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1964-10-30",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Sandra Hall Magnus is an American engineer and a former NASA astronaut. She returned to Earth with the crew of STS-119 Discovery on March 28, 2009, after having spent 134 days in orbit. She was assigned to the crew of STS-135, the final mission of the Space Shuttle. She is also a licensed amateur radio operator with the call sign KE5FYE.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/sandra_magnus_image_20220911033740.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandra_Magnus",
                "last_flight": "2011-07-08T15:29:00Z",
                "first_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 1729,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 440,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/440/?format=api",
                "name": "David Wolf",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1956-08-23",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "David Alexander Wolf is an American astronaut, medical doctor and electrical engineer. Wolf has been to space four times. Three of his spaceflights were short-duration Space Shuttle missions, the first of which was STS-58 in 1993, and his most recent spaceflight was STS-127 in 2009. Wolf also took part in a long-duration mission aboard the Russian space station Mir which lasted 128 days, and occurred during Mir EO-24. He was brought to Mir aboard STS-86 in September 1997, and landed aboard STS-89 in January 1998. In total Wolf has logged more than 4,040 hours in space. He is also a veteran of 7 spacewalks totaling 41hrs 17min in both Russian and American spacesuits.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/david_wolf_image_20220911034349.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Wolf_(astronaut)",
                "last_flight": "2009-07-15T22:03:00Z",
                "first_flight": "1993-10-18T14:53:00Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 2164,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 294,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/294/?format=api",
                "name": "Fyodor Yurchikhin",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 1,
                    "name": "Active"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 63,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/63/?format=api",
                    "name": "Russian Federal Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS)",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1959-01-03",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "Russian",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Fyodor Nikolayevich Yurchikhin (Russian: Фёдор Николаевич Юрчихин, Greek: Θεόδωρος Γιουρτσίχιν του Νικόλαου; born 3 January 1959), is a Russian cosmonaut of Greek descent, engineer and RSC Energia test-pilot who has flown on five spaceflights. His first spaceflight was a 10-day Space Shuttle mission STS-112. His second was a long-duration stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS) as a Flight Engineer for Expedition 15; for this mission he was launched in the Soyuz TMA-10 spacecraft. He has undertaken two further long-duration stays aboard the ISS, as a crew member of Expedition 24 / 25. For this mission he was launched with the spacecraft Soyuz TMA-19, and he landed in November 2010, also with the TMA-19 spacecraft. He served as Soyuz Commander for his fourth mission aboard Soyuz TMA-09M, as Flight Engineer for Expedition 36 and ISS Commander for Expedition 37. In April 2017, Yurchikhin launched on Soyuz MS-04 for the fifth spaceflight of his career, a six-month mission to the ISS as part of Expedition 51 and 52, for which he was the Commander.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/fyodor2520yurchikhin_image_20181201232049.jpg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fyodor_Yurchikhin",
                "last_flight": "2017-04-20T07:13:45Z",
                "first_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z"
            }
        }
    ],
    "onboard_crew": [],
    "landing_crew": [
        {
            "id": 448,
            "role": "Commander",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 461,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/461/?format=api",
                "name": "Jeffrey Ashby",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1954-06-16",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": "https://twitter.com/Jeffrey_S_Ashby",
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Jeffrey Shears \"Bones\" Ashby is an American mechanical engineer, and former naval officer and aviator, test pilot and NASA astronaut, a veteran of three Space Shuttle missions. He is a retired Captain in the U.S. Navy. He currently works for Blue Origin as chief of mission assurance.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/jeffrey_ashby_image_20220911034133.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Ashby",
                "last_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z",
                "first_flight": "1999-07-23T04:31:00Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 414,
            "role": "Pilot",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 472,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/472/?format=api",
                "name": "Pamela Melroy",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1961-09-17",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": "https://twitter.com/Astro_Pam",
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Pamela Anne Melroy is a retired United States Air Force officer and a former NASA astronaut. She served as pilot on Space Shuttle missions STS-92 and STS-112 and commanded mission STS-120 before leaving the agency in August 2009. After serving as Deputy Program Manager, Space Exploration Initiatives with Lockheed Martin, Melroy joined the Federal Aviation Administration in 2011, where she was a senior technical advisor and director of field operations for the FAA's Office of Commercial Space Transportation.\r\n\r\nIn 2013, she left the FAA and joined DARPA as Deputy Director of the Tactical Technology Office. She left the agency in February, 2017.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/pamela_melroy_image_20220911033725.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pamela_Melroy",
                "last_flight": "2007-10-23T15:38:19Z",
                "first_flight": "2000-10-11T23:17:00Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 2154,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 509,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/509/?format=api",
                "name": "Piers Sellers",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 6,
                    "name": "Died While In Active Service"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1955-04-11",
                "date_of_death": "2016-12-23",
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Piers John Sellers OBE was a British-American meteorologist, NASA astronaut[1] and Director of the Earth Science Division at NASA/GSFC. He was a veteran of three space shuttle missions. Sellers attended Cranbrook School, Cranbrook, Kent, United Kingdom, until 1973, and achieved a bachelor's degree in ecological science from the University of Edinburgh in 1976. In 1981 he gained a doctorate in biometeorology from the University of Leeds. In 2011, Sellers retired from the NASA Astronaut Corps.\r\n\r\nBefore joining the astronaut corps, Sellers worked at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on research into how the Earth's biosphere and atmosphere interact. This work involved climate system computer modelling and field work utilising aircraft, satellites and ground support input.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/piers_sellers_image_20220911033612.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piers_Sellers",
                "last_flight": "2010-05-14T18:20:00Z",
                "first_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 2159,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 502,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/502/?format=api",
                "name": "Sandra Magnus",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1964-10-30",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Sandra Hall Magnus is an American engineer and a former NASA astronaut. She returned to Earth with the crew of STS-119 Discovery on March 28, 2009, after having spent 134 days in orbit. She was assigned to the crew of STS-135, the final mission of the Space Shuttle. She is also a licensed amateur radio operator with the call sign KE5FYE.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/sandra_magnus_image_20220911033740.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandra_Magnus",
                "last_flight": "2011-07-08T15:29:00Z",
                "first_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 1732,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 440,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/440/?format=api",
                "name": "David Wolf",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Retired"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 44,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                    "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1956-08-23",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "American",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "David Alexander Wolf is an American astronaut, medical doctor and electrical engineer. Wolf has been to space four times. Three of his spaceflights were short-duration Space Shuttle missions, the first of which was STS-58 in 1993, and his most recent spaceflight was STS-127 in 2009. Wolf also took part in a long-duration mission aboard the Russian space station Mir which lasted 128 days, and occurred during Mir EO-24. He was brought to Mir aboard STS-86 in September 1997, and landed aboard STS-89 in January 1998. In total Wolf has logged more than 4,040 hours in space. He is also a veteran of 7 spacewalks totaling 41hrs 17min in both Russian and American spacesuits.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/david_wolf_image_20220911034349.jpeg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Wolf_(astronaut)",
                "last_flight": "2009-07-15T22:03:00Z",
                "first_flight": "1993-10-18T14:53:00Z"
            }
        },
        {
            "id": 451,
            "role": "Mission Specialist",
            "astronaut": {
                "id": 294,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/astronaut/294/?format=api",
                "name": "Fyodor Yurchikhin",
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Government"
                },
                "status": {
                    "id": 1,
                    "name": "Active"
                },
                "agency": {
                    "id": 63,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/63/?format=api",
                    "name": "Russian Federal Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS)",
                    "type": "Government"
                },
                "date_of_birth": "1959-01-03",
                "date_of_death": null,
                "nationality": "Russian",
                "twitter": null,
                "instagram": null,
                "bio": "Fyodor Nikolayevich Yurchikhin (Russian: Фёдор Николаевич Юрчихин, Greek: Θεόδωρος Γιουρτσίχιν του Νικόλαου; born 3 January 1959), is a Russian cosmonaut of Greek descent, engineer and RSC Energia test-pilot who has flown on five spaceflights. His first spaceflight was a 10-day Space Shuttle mission STS-112. His second was a long-duration stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS) as a Flight Engineer for Expedition 15; for this mission he was launched in the Soyuz TMA-10 spacecraft. He has undertaken two further long-duration stays aboard the ISS, as a crew member of Expedition 24 / 25. For this mission he was launched with the spacecraft Soyuz TMA-19, and he landed in November 2010, also with the TMA-19 spacecraft. He served as Soyuz Commander for his fourth mission aboard Soyuz TMA-09M, as Flight Engineer for Expedition 36 and ISS Commander for Expedition 37. In April 2017, Yurchikhin launched on Soyuz MS-04 for the fifth spaceflight of his career, a six-month mission to the ISS as part of Expedition 51 and 52, for which he was the Commander.",
                "profile_image": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/fyodor2520yurchikhin_image_20181201232049.jpg",
                "wiki": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fyodor_Yurchikhin",
                "last_flight": "2017-04-20T07:13:45Z",
                "first_flight": "2002-10-07T19:45:51Z"
            }
        }
    ],
    "spacecraft": {
        "id": 39,
        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/spacecraft/39/?format=api",
        "name": "Space Shuttle Atlantis",
        "serial_number": "OV-104",
        "status": {
            "id": 2,
            "name": "Retired"
        },
        "description": "Space Shuttle Atlantis (Orbiter Vehicle Designation: OV‑104) is a Space Shuttle orbiter vehicle belonging to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the spaceflight and space exploration agency of the United States. Constructed by the Rockwell International company in Southern California and delivered to the Kennedy Space Center in Eastern Florida in April 1985, Atlantis is the fourth operational and the second-to-last Space Shuttle built. Its maiden flight was STS-51-J from 3 to 7 October 1985.  Atlantis embarked on its 33rd and final mission, also the final mission of a space shuttle, STS-135, on 8 July 2011. STS-134 by Endeavour was expected to be the final flight before STS-135 was authorized in October 2010. STS-135 took advantage of the processing for the STS-335 Launch On Need mission that would have been necessary if STS-134's crew became stranded in orbit. Atlantis landed for the final time at the Kennedy Space Center on 21 July 2011.  By the end of its final mission, Atlantis had orbited the Earth a total of 4,848 times, traveling nearly 126,000,000 mi (203,000,000 km) or more than 525 times the distance from the Earth to the Moon.",
        "spacecraft_config": {
            "id": 14,
            "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/config/spacecraft/14/?format=api",
            "name": "Space Shuttle",
            "type": {
                "id": 3,
                "name": "Spaceplane"
            },
            "agency": {
                "id": 44,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.0.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                "featured": true,
                "type": "Government",
                "country_code": "USA",
                "abbrev": "NASA",
                "description": "The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is an independent agency of the executive branch of the United States federal government responsible for the civilian space program, as well as aeronautics and aerospace research. NASA have many launch facilities but most are inactive. The most commonly used pad will be LC-39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.",
                "administrator": "Administrator: Bill Nelson",
                "founding_year": "1958",
                "launchers": "Space Shuttle | SLS",
                "spacecraft": "Orion",
                "parent": null,
                "image_url": "https://spacelaunchnow-prod-east.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/national2520aeronautics2520and2520space2520administration_image_20190207032448.jpeg"
            },
            "in_use": false,
            "capability": "Carrying a crew of 7 astronauts along with cargo to Low Earth Orbit.",
            "history": "The Space shuttle was a United States space craft. Following the conclusion of the Apollo program the Space Shuttle intended to lower costs for reliable access to Low Earth Orbit. The program ran from 1981-2011.",
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