News on research satellites
- Will we ever travel to an earthlike exoplanet and how?
- The "Pioneer anomali" explained
- DAWN will stay with Vesta for an extra 40 days
- Voygare 1 still far from the interstellar medium
- Nuclear spaceship being prepared for launch
- Rocket launched into Aurora
- Satellite images of nighttime lights help track disease outbreak
- Voyage1 shuts down heat but continues another 13 years
- Voyager1 reaches a pause to interstellar space
- First images from VIIRS
- First space-measurements of Earths water-vapor
- Mission to touch the Sun in 2018
- Manned mission to asteroid
- ROSAT crashes to Earth
- ESA chooses next two science missions
- UARS satellite plunged into the Pacific Ocean
- Exploring an asteroid with the Desert RATS
- UARS satellite crashed - location unknown
- The 6 ton UARS satelite crasches tonight
- Underwater training for manned asteroid mission underwater
- 6ton NASA satellite soon to crash
- Spacejunk is a problem but tiny bits are worse
- Tour the Solarsystem with spaceprobes
- Jupiter-Bound spacecraft captures Earth and Moon
- Juno Spacecraft Launches to Jupiter
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ESA chooses next two science missions
Thursday, 06 October 2011 11:19
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| Spaceflight - Research satellites |
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ESA’s has chosen their next two science missions; Solar Orbiter and Euclid with launches planned for 2017 and 2019. These two missions are medium-class missions and are the first in ESA's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 Plan.
Solar Orbiter will venture closer to the Sun than any previous mission. It is designed to make major breakthroughs in our understanding of how the Sun influences its environment, in particular how the Sun generates and propels the flow of particles in which the planets are bathed, known as the solar wind. Solar activity affects the solar wind, making it very turbulent, and solar flares create strong perturbations in this wind, triggering spectacular auroral displays on Earth and other planets. Solar Orbiter will be close enough to the Sun to sample this solar wind shortly after it has been ejected from the solar surface, while at the same time observing in great detail the process accelerating the wind on the Sun's surface. The mission's launch is planned for 2017 from Cape Canaveral with a NASA-provided Atlas launch vehicle. Euclid is designed to explore the dark side of the Universe. Essentially a space telescope, the mission will map out the large-scale structure of the Universe with unprecedented accuracy. The observations will stretch across 10 billion light years into the Universe, revealing the history of its expansion and the growth of structure during the last three-quarters of its history. One of the deepest modern mysteries is why the Universe is expanding at an ever-accelerating rate. This cosmic acceleration must be driven by something that astronomers have named 'dark energy' to signify its unknown nature. By using Euclid to study its effects on the galaxies and clusters of galaxies that trace the large-scale structure of the Universe, astronomers hope to be able to understand the exact nature of dark energy. Euclid's launch, on a Soyuz launch vehicle, is planned for 2019 from Europe's Spaceport at Kourou, French Guiana. "With the selection of Solar Orbiter and Euclid, the Science Programme has once more shown its relevance to pure science and to the concerns of citizens: Euclid will shed light on the nature of one of the most fundamental forces of the Universe, while Solar Orbiter will help scientists to understand processes, such as coronal mass ejections, that affect Earth's citizens by disrupting, for example, radio communication and power transmission," says Alvaro Giménez, ESA's Director of Science and Robotic Exploration. Source: ESA |




