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This is a list of fictional spacecraft, starships and exo-atmospheric vessels that have been identified by name in notable published works of fiction. The term " spacecraft " is mainly used to refer to spacecraft that are real or conceived using present technology.
Books are listed in alphabetical order by title, ignoring the leading articles "A", "An" and "The". Novel series are alphabetical by author-designated name or, if there is none, the title of the first novel in the series or some other reasonable designation.
The following is a list of fictional astronauts from recent times, using the Space Shuttle, the International Space Station and other spaceflight technologies, as depicted in works released between 2010 and 2029.
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: A fictional astronaut must be human (not an alien, robot, or animal).
The first fictional space habitat proper (not counting the unintentional one in "The Brick Moon") was featured in the 1931 novella "The Prince of Space" by Jack Williamson; [1] it is a cylinder 1,520 metres (5,000 ft) long and wide which rotates to create artificial gravity.
Teenage pilots of the fictional Solomon Space Association (SSA), a Japanese private space company, are trained to perform orbital repairs on satellites and later assist the Space Shuttle Atlantis in launching the unmanned Orpheus probe to Pluto. Tanpopo and Coconut are single-person capsules, while Mangosteen is designed for two crew. Unnamed ...
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