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Spacecraft launched in 1975

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Viking program
pair of NASA space probes sent to Mars
Viking 1
NASA mission which sent an orbiter and lander to Mars
Viking 2
NASA mission which sent an orbiter and lander to Mars
Apollo–Soyuz
Apollo–Soyuz was the first crewed international space mission, conducted jointly by the United States and the Soviet Union in July 1975. Millions watched on television as an American Apollo spacecraft docked with a Soviet Soyuz capsule. The mission and its symbolic "handshake in space" became an emblem of détente during the Cold War.
Venera 9
1975 Soviet uncrewed space mission to Venus
Aryabhata
India's first satellite
Venera 10
space probe
Soyuz 17
crewed flight of the Soyuz programme
Cos-B
COS-B (Celestial Observation Satellite B) was the first European Space Research Organisation (ESRO) mission to study cosmic gamma ray sources. COS-B was first put forward by the European scientific community in the mid-1960s and approved by the ESRO council in 1969. The mission consisted of a satellite containing gamma-ray detectors, which was launched by NASA on behalf of the ESRO on 9 August 1975. The mission was completed on 25 April 1982, after the satellite had been operational for more than 6.5 years, four years longer than planned and had increased the amount of data on gamma rays by a
Soyuz 7K-T No.39
unsuccessful crewed launch of the Soyuz programme
Soyuz 18
crewed flight of the Soyuz programme
Soyuz 20
uncrewed spacecraft launched in 1975 by the Soviet Union
Kosmos 772
1975 Soviet test spaceflight
Luna E-8-5M No.412
soviet space probe
Landsat 2
American Earth-observing satellite launched in 1975
Bion 3
Bion satellite
Kosmos 725
Soviet radar calibration target satellite
Kosmos 745
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 750
Soviet satellite launched in 1975
Explorer 54
NASA satellite
Kosmos 705
Soviet satellite
Kosmos 703
artificial Soviet satellite
Explorer 55
former NASA research satellite
Starlette
geodetic satellite
Kosmos 775
Russian military early warning satellite
GOES-1
American geostationary weather satellite
NSS 703
thumb|left|150px|Launch of NSS-703. NSS-703 (also known as Intelsat 703, IS-703 and Intelsat 7-F3) is a geostationary communication satellite that was built by Space Systems/Loral (SSL). It is located in the orbital position of 29.5 degrees east longitude and it is currently in an inclined orbit. The same is owned by Intelsat and after sold to SES World Skies on November 30, 1998. The satellite was based on the LS-1300 platform and its estimated useful life was 15 years.