- European Space Agency
The first metal 3D printer in space, a collaboration between ESA and Airbus, has printed its first metal product on the International Space Station, a breakthrough in crew autonomy for future long-duration exploration missions
- ESA - Construction of ESA’s ambitious LISA mission begins
Led by ESA, the LISA mission is a collaboration between ESA, its member states, NASA, and an international consortium of scientists (the LISA consortium) The spacecraft is being built and assembled by the industrial core team led by OHB together with Thales Alenia Space
- ESA - Our Missions
Science Exploration Hipparcos Launched: 1989 Mapping the positions of more than 100 000 stars Open Mission Science Exploration Hubble Space Telescope Launched: 1990 ESA contributed solar arrays and Faint Object Camera Open Mission Science Exploration Huygens Launched: 1997 Surface probe of Saturn’s moon Titan
- ESA - Science Exploration
The first metal 3D printer in space, a collaboration between ESA and Airbus, has printed its first metal product on the International Space Station, a breakthrough in crew autonomy for future long-duration exploration missions
- ESA - Space Science
ESA Science features news and resources to inspire the general public and inform the media on the latest discoveries in space exploration, in particular in the search for life on other planets and the origins of the universe
- ESA - Observing the Earth
ESA Observing the Earth homepage features the latest news on ESA's Earth observation activities, missions and satellites, including Aeolus, Swarm, Cryosat, SMOS and the Copernicus Sentinels
- ESA - Euclid opens data treasure trove, offers glimpse of deep fields
“Euclid shows itself once again to be the ultimate discovery machine It is surveying galaxies on the grandest scale, enabling us to explore our cosmic history and the invisible forces shaping our Universe,” says ESA’s Director of Science, Prof Carole Mundell
- ESA tracks rare interstellar comet
ESA astronomers are using telescopes in Hawaii, Chile, and Australia to monitor the comet’s progress Some of these telescopes are owned by ESA, others are provided as part of longstanding partnerships
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