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/2.2.0/spacecraft/flight/?spacecraft=37

GET /2.2.0/spacecraft/flight/260/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "id": 260,
    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/spacecraft/flight/260/?format=api",
    "mission_end": "2008-09-29T00:00:00Z",
    "destination": "International Space Station",
    "launch_crew": [],
    "onboard_crew": [],
    "landing_crew": [],
    "spacecraft": {
        "id": 155,
        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/spacecraft/155/?format=api",
        "name": "Jules Verne ATV",
        "serial_number": "ATV-001",
        "is_placeholder": false,
        "in_space": false,
        "time_in_space": "P203DT19H56M49S",
        "time_docked": "P155DT6H44M",
        "flights_count": 1,
        "mission_ends_count": 1,
        "status": {
            "id": 4,
            "name": "Single Use"
        },
        "description": "The Jules Verne ATV, or Automated Transfer Vehicle 001 (ATV-001), was an unmanned cargo resupply spacecraft launched by the European Space Agency (ESA). The ATV was named after the 19th-century French science-fiction author Jules Verne. It was launched on 9 March 2008 on a mission to supply the International Space Station (ISS) with propellant, water, air, and dry cargo. Jules Verne was the first of five ATVs to be launched.",
        "spacecraft_config": {
            "id": 17,
            "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/config/spacecraft/17/?format=api",
            "name": "Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV)",
            "type": {
                "id": 4,
                "name": "Cargo Resupply"
            },
            "agency": {
                "id": 115,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/115/?format=api",
                "name": "Arianespace",
                "featured": true,
                "type": "Commercial",
                "country_code": "FRA",
                "abbrev": "ASA",
                "description": "Arianespace SA is a multinational company founded in 1980 as the world's first commercial launch service provider. It undertakes the production, operation, and marketing of the Ariane programme. Their vehicles launch exclusively from French Guiana in South America.",
                "administrator": "CEO: David Cavaillolès",
                "founding_year": "1980",
                "launchers": "Ariane | Vega",
                "spacecraft": "",
                "parent": "ArianeGroup",
                "image_url": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/ariane_62_on_el_image_20240708201807.jpeg",
                "logo_url": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/arianespace_logo_20210603173752.png"
            },
            "in_use": false,
            "capability": "Cargo Earth Orbit Logistics",
            "history": "During the 1990s, as the International Space Station program was taking place, it was collectively recognised by the 15 participating nations that, upon completion, the International Space Station (ISS), a crewed space station in Low Earth orbit (LEO), would require regular resupply missions in order to meet the needs of the onboard crew as well as to deliver apparatus to support the various scientific tests that would be performed on board. In October 1995, it was agreed that, amongst the various contributions to the ISS program that Europe would assume responsibility for under the vestiges of the European Space Agency (ESA), would be the Automated Transfer Vehicle, or ATV; this logistics-orientated spacecraft would perform the identified resupply missions to ISS.",
            "details": "In terms of its role, the ATV was designed to complement the smaller Russian Progress spacecraft, possessing three times its useful payload capacity. Similar to the Progress, it would carry both bulk liquids and relatively fragile freight, which would be stored within a cargo hold maintained at a pressurized shirt-sleeve environment in order that astronauts would be able to access payloads without the need to put on spacesuits. The pressurized cargo section of the ATV was based on the Italian-built Multi-Purpose Logistics Module (MPLM), which was a Shuttle-carried \"space barge\" that had been previously used for transporting equipment to and from the Station. Unlike the MPLM, the ATV used the same docking mechanism as employed upon the Progress. The ATV, like the Progress, also serves as a container for the station's waste. Each ATV weighs 20.7 tonnes at launch and has a cargo capacity of 8 tonnes.",
            "maiden_flight": "2008-03-09",
            "height": 10.3,
            "diameter": 4.5,
            "human_rated": false,
            "crew_capacity": null,
            "payload_capacity": 7667,
            "payload_return_capacity": null,
            "flight_life": "Six months when docked",
            "image_url": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/automated_trans_image_20231118111716.jpeg",
            "nation_url": null,
            "wiki_link": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_Transfer_Vehicle",
            "info_link": ""
        }
    },
    "launch": {
        "id": "967894dd-25b7-43e7-99be-a30a36a54ec3",
        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/launch/967894dd-25b7-43e7-99be-a30a36a54ec3/?format=api",
        "slug": "ariane-5-es-atv-1-jules-verne",
        "name": "Ariane 5 ES | ATV-1 \"Jules Verne\"",
        "status": {
            "id": 3,
            "name": "Launch Successful",
            "abbrev": "Success",
            "description": "The launch vehicle successfully inserted its payload(s) into the target orbit(s)."
        },
        "last_updated": "2024-06-15T14:06:58Z",
        "net": "2008-03-09T04:03:11Z",
        "window_end": "2008-03-09T04:03:11Z",
        "window_start": "2008-03-09T04:03:11Z",
        "net_precision": {
            "id": 0,
            "name": "Second",
            "abbrev": "SEC",
            "description": "The T-0 is accurate to the second."
        },
        "probability": null,
        "weather_concerns": null,
        "holdreason": "",
        "failreason": "",
        "hashtag": null,
        "launch_service_provider": {
            "id": 115,
            "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/115/?format=api",
            "name": "Arianespace",
            "type": "Commercial"
        },
        "rocket": {
            "id": 560,
            "configuration": {
                "id": 18,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/config/launcher/18/?format=api",
                "name": "Ariane 5 ES",
                "family": "Ariane",
                "full_name": "Ariane 5 ES",
                "variant": "ES"
            }
        },
        "mission": {
            "id": 618,
            "name": "ATV-1 \"Jules Verne\"",
            "description": "ATV-1 is the Automated Transfer Vehicle operated by the European Space Agency (ESA) to resuplly the international space station (ISS) with propellant, water, air and dry cargo. After three weeks of orbit testing it rendezvoused with the ISS on 3rd April 2008.",
            "launch_designator": null,
            "type": "Resupply",
            "orbit": {
                "id": 8,
                "name": "Low Earth Orbit",
                "abbrev": "LEO"
            },
            "agencies": [],
            "info_urls": [],
            "vid_urls": []
        },
        "pad": {
            "id": 77,
            "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/pad/77/?format=api",
            "agency_id": 115,
            "name": "Ariane Launch Area 3",
            "description": "ELA-3, is a launch pad and associated facilities at the Centre Spatial Guyanais in French Guiana. ELA-3 was operated by Arianespace as part of the expendable launch system for Ariane 5 launch vehicles.",
            "info_url": null,
            "wiki_url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELA-3",
            "map_url": "https://www.google.com/maps?q=5.239,-52.768",
            "latitude": "5.239",
            "longitude": "-52.768",
            "location": {
                "id": 13,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/location/13/?format=api",
                "name": "Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana",
                "country_code": "GUF",
                "description": "The Guiana Space Centre is a European spaceport to the northwest of Kourou in French Guiana, a region of France in South America. Kourou is located at a latitude of 5°. In operation since 1968, it is a suitable location for a spaceport because of its equatorial location and open sea to the east.",
                "map_image": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/map_images/location_13_20200803142412.jpg",
                "timezone_name": "America/Cayenne",
                "total_launch_count": 324,
                "total_landing_count": 0
            },
            "country_code": "GUF",
            "map_image": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/map_images/pad_77_20200803143458.jpg",
            "total_launch_count": 118,
            "orbital_launch_attempt_count": 118
        },
        "webcast_live": false,
        "image": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/ariane252052520es_image_20190222031145.jpeg",
        "infographic": null,
        "program": [
            {
                "id": 17,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/program/17/?format=api",
                "name": "International Space Station",
                "description": "The International Space Station programme is tied together by a complex set of legal, political and financial agreements between the sixteen nations involved in the project, governing ownership of the various components, rights to crewing and utilization, and responsibilities for crew rotation and resupply of the International Space Station. It was conceived in 1984 by President Ronald Reagan, during the Space Station Freedom project as it was originally called.",
                "agencies": [
                    {
                        "id": 16,
                        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/16/?format=api",
                        "name": "Canadian Space Agency",
                        "type": "Government"
                    },
                    {
                        "id": 27,
                        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/27/?format=api",
                        "name": "European Space Agency",
                        "type": "Multinational"
                    },
                    {
                        "id": 37,
                        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/37/?format=api",
                        "name": "Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency",
                        "type": "Government"
                    },
                    {
                        "id": 44,
                        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/44/?format=api",
                        "name": "National Aeronautics and Space Administration",
                        "type": "Government"
                    },
                    {
                        "id": 63,
                        "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/agencies/63/?format=api",
                        "name": "Russian Federal Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS)",
                        "type": "Government"
                    }
                ],
                "image_url": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/international2_program_20201129184745.png",
                "start_date": "1998-11-20T06:40:00Z",
                "end_date": null,
                "info_url": "https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html",
                "wiki_url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Space_Station_programme",
                "mission_patches": [],
                "type": {
                    "id": 2,
                    "name": "Human Spaceflight"
                }
            }
        ],
        "orbital_launch_attempt_count": 4893,
        "location_launch_attempt_count": 190,
        "pad_launch_attempt_count": 37,
        "agency_launch_attempt_count": 176,
        "orbital_launch_attempt_count_year": 8,
        "location_launch_attempt_count_year": 1,
        "pad_launch_attempt_count_year": 1,
        "agency_launch_attempt_count_year": 1,
        "type": "normal"
    },
    "landing": {
        "id": 470,
        "attempt": false,
        "success": null,
        "description": "The ATV spacecraft burned up as planned upon entering Earth's atmosphere.",
        "downrange_distance": null,
        "location": null,
        "type": {
            "id": 7,
            "name": "Destructive Reentry",
            "abbrev": "ATM",
            "description": "Spacecraft burned up in the atmosphere"
        }
    },
    "docking_events": [
        {
            "id": 150,
            "spacestation": {
                "id": 4,
                "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/spacestation/4/?format=api",
                "name": "International Space Station",
                "status": {
                    "id": 1,
                    "name": "Active"
                },
                "founded": "1998-11-20",
                "description": "The International Space Station (ISS) is a space station, or a habitable artificial satellite, in low Earth orbit. Its first component was launched into orbit in 1998, with the first long-term residents arriving in November 2000. It has been inhabited continuously since that date. The last pressurised module was fitted in 2011, and an experimental inflatable space habitat was added in 2016. The station is expected to operate until 2030. Development and assembly of the station continues, with several new elements scheduled for launch in 2019. The ISS is the largest human-made body in low Earth orbit and can often be seen with the naked eye from Earth. The ISS consists of pressurised habitation modules, structural trusses, solar arrays, radiators, docking ports, experiment bays and robotic arms. ISS components have been launched by Russian Proton and Soyuz rockets, and American Space Shuttles.",
                "orbit": "Low Earth Orbit",
                "image_url": "https://thespacedevs-prod.nyc3.digitaloceanspaces.com/media/images/international2520space2520station_image_20190220215716.jpeg"
            },
            "docking": "2008-04-03T14:45:00Z",
            "departure": "2008-09-05T21:29:00Z",
            "docking_location": {
                "id": 2,
                "name": "Zvezda aft",
                "spacestation": {
                    "id": 4,
                    "url": "https://ll.thespacedevs.com/2.2.0/spacestation/4/?format=api",
                    "name": "International Space Station"
                }
            }
        }
    ]
}