
Copernical Team
Meet ESA’s R&D department

Our new brochure introduces ESA’s R&D department: the engineers charged with inventing the new technologies needed for Europe to push further out into space, and develop the novel services improving our lives here on Earth.
ESA's Solar Orbiter ducks behind the sun

Name: Solar Orbiter, or "Solo' as the mission control team fondly call it, is one of the European Space Agency's pluckiest missions and is now cruising toward the sun.
Age: One year old! We launched on 10 February 2020. Granted, it was first powered up on Earth at some point during construction, but launch is 'when it came alive."
What's it doing out there? It's imaging our star, observing the solar wind and unraveling mysteries of the solar cycle. It's already returned some of the best images of ol'Sol ever, revealing omnipresent miniature solar flares, dubbed 'campfires," near the surface.
Anything else? Well, it uses prehistoric cave pigment as a coating to withstand temperatures up to 520°C. The sun's pretty darn hot, you know.
So, what's happening now? The spacecraft's orbit is taking it behind the sun, and starting a few days ago the apparent angle, as seen from Earth, between Solar Orbiter and the sun started falling below 5 degrees.
Russian cosmonauts to test new shielding material for radiation protection

China tests its missile interception equipment

DARPA pursues plan for robust manufacturing in space

NATO picks France's Toulouse for new military space 'Center of Excellence'

Study of supergiant star Betelgeuse unveils the cause of its pulsations

Rare blast's remains discovered in Milky Way's center

RUAG Space provides Solar Subsystem for planet hunter PLATO

Water ice resources identified in Martian northern hemisphere
