7.07.2018
FULL STEAM AHEAD FOR AEOLUS LAUNCH
Having set sail from France on 15 June - Global Wind Day, ESA’s Aeolus wind satellite has arrived safe and sound at the launch site in French Guiana.
While almost all satellites travel by aircraft, Aeolus’ journey was rather different – it travelled all the way across the Atlantic from Saint Nazare, western France to the Port of Cayenne, French Guiana by ship.
Aeolus carries one of the most sophisticated instruments ever to be put into orbit. A 12-day journey was undertaken to avoid potential damage caused by air re-pressurisation during descent had the satellite travelled by air – a quicker but decidedly riskier option.
Upon its long-awaited arrival, the team unloaded Aeolus and its support equipment. The containers were then carefully positioned on a truck to be transported to the launch site about 60 km away, where the satellite container was moved into the airlock, to stabilise after its long journey.
The satellite was then removed from its container, placed on its integration trolley for testing and connected to its electrical support equipment. Initial checks indicate that Aeolus has withstood its journey from France in good condition.
ESA’s Aeolus project manager, Anders Elfving, said, “We are obviously all extremely pleased that Aeolus has now arrived at the launch site. An awful lot of work and planning went into making sure it arrived safe and sound – now it’s full steam ahead for preparing the satellite for liftoff on 21 August.”
A range of checks will be carried out on the satellite in the cleanroom before the scheduled liftoff on a Vega rocket on 21 August at 21:20 GMT (23:20 CEST) from Europe’s spaceport near Kourou.
This pioneering mission is set to provide global wind-profile data, using powerful laser technology that probes the lowermost 30 km of our atmosphere to yield vertical profiles of the wind and information on aerosols and clouds.
The mission will improve our understanding of how atmosphere dynamics work and contribute to climate change research. At the same time, it will also help to predict extreme events such as hurricanes and help us to better understand and model large-scale wind patterns driving weather such as El Niño.
It is also expected to bring considerable benefits to society by improving weather forecasts. Its global wind measurements, delivered almost in real time, are exactly what meteorological centres are looking for to improve their forecasts.
ESA’s Aeolus mission scientist, Anne Grete Straume, added, “We expect Aeolus to advance science, whilst at the same time having a range of potential practical application areas by improving forecasts, which is of importance to the wind energy industry, for example. Accurate forecasts are just one of the ways in which our mission will be able to help".
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AEOLUS UNVEILED AND SWITCHED ON
Following its arrival at Europe’s spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on 29 June, the Aeolus satellite has been taken out from its transport container, placed on its integration trolley for testing and connected to its electrical support equipment.
ESA’s Aeolus project manager, Anders Elfving, said, “We are obviously all extremely pleased that Aeolus has now arrived at the launch site. An awful lot of work and planning went into making sure it arrived safe and sound – now it’s full steam ahead for preparing the satellite for liftoff on 21 August.”
The team has also done the ‘ launch adapter fit check’, which is to make sure that the satellite actually fits the Vega rocket adapter and confirms that everything is aligned. This too went well.
Quelle: ESA
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Update: 13.08.2018
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PRESSEEINLADUNG: START DER WIND-MISSION AEOLUS AM 21. AUGUST
Die Aeolus-Mission, bei der eine revolutionäre Lasertechnologie zur Messung von Winden rund um die Erde zum Einsatz kommt, wird am 21. August von Europas Raumflughafen Kourou in Französisch-Guayana aus ins All aufbrechen. Medienvertreter sind eingeladen, den Start des jüngsten Erdforschungssatelliten im Europäischen Raumflugkontrollzentrum (ESOC) in Darmstadt mitzuverfolgen.
Diese bahnbrechende Mission nutzt eine leistungsstarke Lasertechnologie, mit der zur Erstellung vertikaler Windprofile und Sammlung von Informationen über Aerosole und Wolken die unteren 30 km unserer Atmosphäre abgetastet werden, was einen völlig neuen Ansatz zur Messung von Winden aus dem Weltraum darstellt.
Obwohl unsere täglichen Wettervorhersagen Informationen über den Wind umfassen, werden keine direkten Messungen durchgeführt. Wissenschaftler und Meteorologen benötigen zum besseren Verständnis der Systeme, die unser Wetter und Klima beeinflussen, und zur Verbesserung der Vorhersagen jedoch genaue und zeitnahe Winddaten. Aeolus ist der erste Satellit, der diese Informationen bereitstellen kann.
Der Start an Bord einer Vega-Rakete ist für den 21. August um 23.20 Uhr MESZ geplant.
Die neuesten Nachrichten und Informationen zu dieser Mission sind unter www.esa.int/aeolus zu finden.
Der Twitter-Hashtag ist #Aeolus.
Live-Programm zum Start von Aeolus im Europäischen Raumflugkontrollzentrum der ESA
Das Programm beginnt um 22.00 Uhr MESZ und umfasst kurze Informationsrunden zu den wissenschaftlichen Zielen dieser neuen Windmission, ihrem komplexen Laserinstrument und der Nutzung der gewonnenen Daten sowie Live-Updates der Teams im ESOC-Hauptkontrollraum und vom Startplatz in Kourou. Für Einzelinterviews werden Missionsspezialisten zur Verfügung stehen.
Programm (alle Zeitangaben in MESZ)
20.30 Uhr Einlass
21.15 Uhr Medienbesuch im ESOC-Kontrollzentrum
22.00 Uhr Beginn des Veranstaltungsprogramms im ESOC-Pressenzentrum:
Grußwort des Leiters des ESOC und Direktors für Missionsbetrieb, Rolf Densing, und des Leiters der ESA-Erdbeobachtungsprojekte, Philippe Goudy, mit anschließender Gesprächsrunde mit Missionsspezialisten und Meteorologieexperten.
22.50 Uhr Liveschaltung nach Kourou
23.20 Uhr Start von Aeolus (Live-Übertragung)
23.35 Uhr Pause
00.30 Uhr Erneute Liveschaltung nach Kourou
01.00 Uhr Ende des Programms
Anmeldung
Anmeldung bis Freitag, 17. August über folgendes Anmeldeformular:
https://se.myconvento.com/public/event_register/do_register/2367916
Veranstaltungsort
ESA–ESOC
Robert-Bosch-Straße 5
64293 Darmstadt
Quelle: ESA
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Update: 15.08.2018
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AEOLUS IN LAUNCH TOWER
ESA’s Aeolus wind satellite is poised for liftoff from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. This latest Earth Explorer satellite has been at the launch site since early July being readied for its ride into space on 21 August at 21:20 GMT (23:20 CEST).
Aeolus was sealed from view in its Vega rocket fairing last week, after which it was rolled out to the launch pad, hoisted into the launch tower and joined to the rest of the rocket.
Like all of ESA’s Earth Explorer missions, Aeolus will fill a gap in our knowledge of how our planet works and show how novel technology can be used to observe Earth from space.
Aeolus carries one of the most sophisticated instruments ever to be put into orbit.
The first of its kind, the Aladin instrument includes revolutionary laser technology to generate pulses of ultraviolet light that are beamed down into the atmosphere to profile the world’s winds – a completely new approach to measuring the wind from space.
This technology has been particularly challenging to develop and consequently it has taken some years to get this far.
ESA’s Director of Earth Observation Programmes, Josef Aschbacher, said, “Aeolus has certainly posed some technical challenges, but after all it is completely new – the wind has never been measured from space this way before.
“Aeolus is set to be a game changer for understanding the dynamics of our atmosphere and it will have real-world applications by being used to improve our weather forecasts.
“The development path may have been somewhat rocky, but we are all thrilled to see it now in the launch tower awaiting its big day.”
By profiling the lowermost 30 km of the atmosphere, Aeolus will give scientists global information on the speed of the wind in near-real time.
This will improve our understanding of how wind, pressure, temperature and humidity are interlinked.
This new mission will also provide insight into how the wind influences the exchange of heat and moisture between Earth’s surface and the atmosphere. These aspects are important for understanding climate change.
As well as advancing science and improving weather forecasts, data from Aeolus will be used in air-quality models to improve forecasts of dust and other airborne particles that affect public health.