ADM-Aeolus - Vega - Куру/CSG - 22.08.2018

Автор PIN, 27.11.2017 20:13:26

« назад - далее »

0 Пользователи и 1 гость просматривают эту тему.

tnt22

ЦитироватьArianespace Flight VV12 - Aeolus - Official Speeches

arianespace

Опубликовано: 22 авг. 2018 г.
(5:15)

tnt22

НОРАД обнаружил один объект запуска
0 TBA - TO BE ASSIGNED
1 43600U 18066A   18234.96915472 -.00000133  00000-0  00000+0 0  9992
2 43600  96.7326 241.2213 0000277 311.8959 135.0650 15.85746014    06
43600 / 2018-066A : 314 x 314 km x 96.733°

tnt22

Запись трансляции Arianespace

на англ. яз.
ЦитироватьArianespace Flight VV12 - Aeolus (EN)
Доступ по ссылке

arianespace

Трансляция началась 4 часа назад

(1:52:20)
на фр. яз.
ЦитироватьArianespace Vol VV12 - Aeolus (FR)
Доступ по ссылке

arianespace

Трансляция началась 4 часа назад

(1:52:55)

tnt22

http://tass.ru/kosmos/5481922
ЦитироватьРакета Vega вывела на орбиту спутник Aeolus для исследования климата Земли

Космос | 23 августа, 1:14 | дата обновления: 23 августа, 3:36 UTC+3

ПАРИЖ, 23 августа. /ТАСС/. Ракета-носитель легкого класса Vega успешно доставила на орбиту в ночь на четверг европейский спутник Aeolus, предназначенный для исследования климата на Земле. Выведение аппарата на расчетную высоту подтвердили в пресс- службе Европейского космического агентства (ЕКА), которое выступило заказчиком запуска.

Ракета стартовала с космодрома в Куру (Гвианский космический центр, ГКЦ) в Латинской Америке в 18:20 по местному времени (00:20 мск). "Спустя 55 минут верхняя ступень ракеты Vega доставила Aeolus на орбиту, контакт [с аппаратом] был установлен через наземную станцию Тролль в Антарктике в 00:30 по Центральноевропейскому времени (01:30 мск - прим. ТАСС) 23 августа", - уточнили в ЕКА.

Новый орбитальный аппарат, отметили в агентстве, "будет использовать революционные лазерные технологии для измерения скорости ветров на земном шаре и будет играть ключевую роль в изучении принципов работы атмосферы". Кроме того, как рассчитывают ученые, спутник позволит выполнять более точные прогнозы погоды на Земле.
Спойлер
"Aeolus является квинтэссенцией того, что называется аппаратом для исследования Земли, - отметил после успешного запуска генеральный директор ЕКА Йоханн-Дитрих Вернер. - Он заполнит пробел в наших познаниях о том, как функционирует планета, и продемонстрирует, как передовые технологии могут применяться в космосе".

Первоначально запуск Vega с космодрома ГКЦ должен был состояться во вторник, однако старт был отложен на сутки из- за неблагоприятных метеоусловий. Как объяснили тогда в компании Arianespace, обслуживающей старты с этой площадки во Французской Гвиане, пуску помешал сильный ветер в районе стартовой площадки.

Aeolus получил свое название в честь Эола - полубога из древнегреческой мифологии, который был повелителем ветров и властелином воздушной стихии. Измерительные приборы аппарата должны позволить ученым исследовать взаимосвязь между ветрами, давлением и влажностью в земной атмосфере. Наиболее инновационным инструментом, установленным на Aeolus, в ЕКА называют лазерный сканер, который будет посылать в атмосферу пучки ультрафиолетовых лучей для сбора данных о ветрах на Земле. Контролировать деятельность спутника будут специалисты ЕКА из европейского центра управления полетами в Дармштадте - в ближайшие месяцы они будут заниматься отладкой аппарата перед началом его полноценной работы.
[свернуть]

tnt22

ЦитироватьJonathan McDowell‏Подлинная учетная запись @planet4589 37 мин. назад

The @esa Aeolus satellite has been cataloged as 43600, in a 314 x 314 km x 96.7 deg sun-sync orbit with 0600 local time descending node.

tnt22

ЦитироватьJonathan McDowell‏Подлинная учетная запись @planet4589 33 мин. назад

Aeolus' Vega upper stage, AVUM VV12, also entered orbit. Although it completed slightly more than one orbit, it is not expected to get a US catalog number. AVUM's deorbit burn at 2303 UTC caused it to reenter over the Indian Ocean about 91E 19S around 2343 UTC

tnt22

https://spaceflightnow.com/2018/08/22/pioneering-european-winds-observatory-launched-aboard-vega-rocket/
ЦитироватьPioneering European winds observatory launched aboard Vega rocket
August 22, 2018 | Stephen Clark


A Vega rocket lifted off Wednesday fr om French Guiana with the European Space Agency's Aeolus Earth science mission. Credit: ESA/CNES/Arianespace – Photo Optique Video du CSG – S. Martin

A European satellite hosting a spaceborne laser crafted to measure winds in Earth's atmosphere rode a Vega launcher into orbit Wednesday fr om French Guiana, a thundering sendoff for a three-year mission that could improve global weather forecasts.

The 98-foot-tall (30-meter) Vega rocket, primarily built by Avio in Italy, lit its solid-fueled first stage motor at 2120:09 GMT (5:20:09 p.m. EDT; 6:20:09 p.m. French Guiana time) Wednesday and steered on a trajectory north away from the European-run spaceport on the northern coast of South America.

Flying for the 12th time, the four-stage Vega launcher reached supersonic speed in around 30 seconds, darting through a partly cloud sky shortly before sunset at the space base on the edge of the Amazon jungle.

Two more solid-fueled rocket motors fired in succession, then an upper stage engine fed by liquid propellants ignited twice to maneuver the European Space Agency's Aeolus satellite into a polar orbit approximately 199 miles (320 kilometers) above Earth.

After flying halfway around the world, automated commands sent from the Vega rocket's on-board computer released the Aeolus spacecraft around 55 minutes into the mission. Ground stations in Australia and Antarctica received the first signals from the satellite, and relayed the telemetry to the European Space Operations Center in Darmstadt, Germany, wh ere engineers confirmed Aeolus was in good shape following launch.

Arianespace, the French launch services provider in charge of Wednesday's Vega flight, declared the launch successful, making the light-class launcher 12-for-12 since its debut in 2012.
Спойлер

Artist's concept of the Aeolus satellite in orbit. Credit: ESA/ATG medialab

"Arianespace is delighted to confirm that Aeolus has been safely separated in its targeted sun synchronous orbit. Congratulations to all," said Stephane Israel, CEO of Arianespace. "Aeolus will precisely measure wind flow and air currents on the Earth, improving weather forecasting, and ultimately our ability to protect the environment. Aeolus demonstrates how assets in space can help to preserve our planet, and how Europe can contribute to this critical mission."

Funded by the European Space Agency and built by Airbus Defense and Space, the 480 million euro ($550 million) Aeolus mission is nearly two decades in the making. Since receiving ESA's formal go-ahead in 2002, Aeolus has suffered numerous delays as engineers encountered problems with the mission's laser instrument.

Aeolus will gather the first comprehensive worldwide measurements of wind speed — over oceans and land masses — from Earth's surface to an altitude of nearly 100,000 feet (30 kilometers).

Data collected by the Aeolus satellite will be fed into numerical weather prediction models, replacing simulated "boundary conditions" in the computers models with near real-time measurements from space.

"We are serving the meteorological community as the primary user, but also the climate research community," said Anders Elfving, Aeolus project manager at ESA. "For decades, there has been an outcry from these communities for explicit wind measurements, explicit wind profiles in the whole atmosphere, globally and continuously."

Aeolus was not conceived by ESA as an operational weather satellite, but forecasters will be some of the prime beneficiaries of the mission. The mission is named for a figure in Greek mythology who was appointed by the gods as "keeper of the winds,"

"We have a unique product which can be — if proven to the right quality — directly injected into the weather models," Elfving said in a phone interview with Spaceflight Now before the launch. "Our main client is the ECMWF, the European Center for Medium Range Weather Forecasts ... in the UK, and they will certainly inject our data straight into their model and get a lot of good boundary conditions for winds, which are today completely missing."


Artist's concept of the Aeolus satellite measuring winds from low Earth orbit. Credit: ESA/ATG medialab

Aeolus carries a high-power ultraviolet laser fired at 50 pulses per second toward the ground. Light emitted from the laser — the centerpiece of Aeolus's single science instrument — will bounce off air molecules, aerosol and cloud particles, and Earth's surface.

A tiny fraction of the scattered ultraviolet photons will reflect back toward a 5-foot (1.5-meter) telescope on the Aeolus satellite.

"Aeolus actually has its own sun on-board in the sense that it's sending out laser light into the atmosphere, and this laser light is then scattered back from air molecules and particles in the atmosphere," said Anne Grete Straume, ESA's Aeolus mission scientist.

The light will return to the Aeolus satellite's Atmospheric Laser Doppler Instrument — ALADIN — with a slightly different color. By analyzing the change in color caused by the motion of atmospheric air molecules — known as the Doppler effect — scientists can derive wind speeds.

The Doppler effect is the same process that causes an ambulance's siren to sound different when it approaches and drives away.

"The same happens to the light which is sent out by the satellite," Straume said in an ESA video interview. "The movement of the air molecules and the particles in its path will actually stretch or compress the light wave, and you get a different color coming back to the instrument.

"We measure the back reflection of the air and the particles at different ranges from the instrument, and from this you can actually measure the winds at different altitudes through the atmosphere from the surface up to the stratosphere," she said. "About 30 kilometers is the top level that we will be able to measure."

No other space mission has been able to measure winds at multiple layers of the atmosphere on a global scale. Previous satellites have been limited to deriving winds measurements by tracking the movement of clouds and aerosols, or by measuring the effect of winds on the ocean surface.

But Aeolus will be able to measure wind speeds in clear skies, eliminating the limitations of other missions. Meteorologists currently use weather balloons and airplanes for wind data, but the observations are spotty.


A technician inspects the telescope on the ALADIN instrument aboard the Aeolus satellite. Credit: ESA

Wind measurements from Aeolus "will fill a significant gap in the wind observing system, particularly in the upper troposphere, the lower stratosphere, in the tropics and over the oceans, wh ere in situ wind observations are lacking," scientists Michael Rennie and Lars Isaksen from the ECMWF wrote in a blog post earlier this month.

Researchers also intend to analyze data from Aeolus to gain a better understanding of how winds are generated, and how atmospheric currents are linked to changes in Earth's climate.

"The winds are connecting all the areas together," Straume said. "It's transporting air from one place to the next, and it's also what you feel on the ground, which will actually feed into the storms and the weather.

"There will be scientific users who want to learn more about winds, the relationship between wind, temperature and pressure, and also climate modelists in order to make these long forecasts into the years to come," Straume said. "They need to understand how the wind is working, and they will pick up our data.

"I'm really looking forward to the first light coming back through the instrument, and being sent down to Earth and analyzed, and we will see what the instrument really can do," she said. "And I'm looking very much forward to the first wind observations and these bineg used by the weather forecast models."

As the satellite orbits nearly 200 miles above the Earth, Aeolus will point its ultraviolet laser beam at an angle of 35 degrees to the side of its ground track, in the direction away from the sun.

Aeolus launched into a "dawn-dusk" polar orbit, meaning the spacecraft will roughly follow the boundary between day and night as it travels in a north-south direction, circling the planet every 90 minutes or so.

"We are actually shooting our laser pulse in a slant angle of 35 degrees perpendicular to the orbit, and measuring the line-of-sight return wind speed," Elfving told Spaceflight Now. "For all purposes, the vertical winds are very small with respect to horizontal winds. So what we've promised to give are horizontal line-of-sight winds, which in practice means, more or less, the east-west wind all over the world. That may sound limited, but when meteorologists but that boundary condition of that vector into their overall wind models, they get 75 to 80 percent knowledge of the total wind vector."


The Aeolus satellite will measure winds by pointing its laser instrument at a 35-degree angle off its ground track in the direction away from the sun. Credit: ESA/ATG medialab

The long wait has not tempered expectations for Aeolus.

"We were initially promising that we would be flying in 2007, or at least in early 2008," said Elfving, who became Aeolus project manager in 2010. "Yes, we have had a 10-and-a-half or 11-year delay. My director said we are not ashamed at all of that. We are very proud to have sustained through all the troubles because there is actually no other comparable mission implemented in the world."

Engineers determined Aeolus needed an ultraviolet laser to give Aeolus the capability to monitor global winds. A laser operating in visible wavelengths, such as the laser aboard the U.S.-French CALIPSO satellite, would only be tuned to track cloud motion.

Ultraviolet lasers flown in space on previous tech demo and Earth science missions have not succeeded. Most recently, an ultraviolet laser on NASA's Cloud-Aerosol Transport System instrument on the International Space Station failed soon after it was activated in 2015.

Some of the major challenges that faced the Aeolus team included selecting materials that can cope with the high-temperature output of the laser.

"We pulse our optics 50 times every second, and this goes on year after year, and this intense pulse creates 1,700 degrees on the optical surface of the optics, and will fatigue the optics in the long run," Elfving said. "So we have had tremendous development of the coatings of the optics to withstand this high laser pulse. We are actually our own sun."

Managers ordered one of the most significant redesigns of the ALADIN instrument aboard Aeolus to ensure the sensor's optical surfaces remain free of contamination.

"If there are some remaining hydrocarbons on the surface of the optics, and the UV light hits it, it will carbonize, so blacken, the surface and reduce dramatically the reflection or transmissibility of the optics," Elfving said. "That has been a pain for many missions trying to do this."


The Aeolus satellite inside a clean room at the Guiana Space Center before its encapsulation inside the Vega rocket's payload fairing. Credit: ESA

Despite strict clean room controls on the ground, all space missions launch with some amount of contamination, which can outgas in orbit once heated by the sun. The high-energy laser aboard Aeolus could also lead to outgassing as it warms up materials inside the ALADIN instrument.

Engineers determined they could flush the ALADIN instrument with tiny injections of pure oxygen throughout the Aeolus mission. Two high-pressure tanks carrying a combined load of around 31 pounds (14 kilograms) of liquid oxygen will gradually supply the instrument once in space.

"We have a regulation system which takes the high pressure oxygen down to an extremely low pressure in orbit — 40 to 60 pascal — which is an incredibly light pressure, very few molecules," Elfving said.

The amount of oxygen gas inside the instrument in space will be equivalent to the oxygen produced by a small plant indoors, according to ESA.

"But it is enough to cause combustion of this organic material which always remains on the optics," Elfving said. "It helps to catalyze and burn away that, instead of carbonizing it and blackening the optics.

"Those two, I would say, have been the main challenges — laser-induced contamination and laser-induced damage," he added. "For the rest, we are talking about stabilities in alignment of microns or nanometers, and that's obviously a tough challenge, especially when we are pumping a lot of energy into the laser.

"That put us between a rock and a hard place," Elfving said. "So it has taken us about 10 years to get from a prototype laser to a flight-worthy laser with a lifetime that meets our requirements. In the beginning, due to this laser-induced contamination, we lost about 50 percent of the energy within hours, and we now we have run a laser with absolutely no degradation for six months and beyond. So we're very confident that have achieved the state of the art."

Concerns about the sensitivity of the Aeolus satellite's laser instrument drove managers to transport the spacecraft from Europe to the mission's launch base in South America by ship instead of airplane. Engineers worried the pressure increase during an airplane's descent would damage the instrument package on Aeolus.

There were no such concerns about a pressure decrease like the conditions the spacecraft encountered as it climbed into space.

Once the spacecraft arrived in French Guiana, teams fueled Aeolus and put the spacecraft through an extra step of cleaning. Technicians used a powerful ultraviolet torch to search for particles of dust residing on the satellite, then used a soft brush and vacuum cleaner to remove any contamination they found.

"This is a bit of a tedious task, but one that is necessary," ESA said in a statement.

The Aeolus satellite was built by Airbus Defense and Space's spacecraft manufacturing plant in Stevenage, England, and is based on the satellite design used by ESA's Rosetta and Mars Express interplanetary probes. With its maneuvering fuel loaded, Aeolus weighed around 3,013 pounds (1,367 kilograms) at launch, according to Elfving.

Airbus Defense and Space's division in Toulouse, France, developed the ALADIN instrument, and the laser transmitters were supplied by the Italian company Leonardo in Florence and Pomezia, Italy.

The launch was delayed an extra day from Tuesday to Wednesday to allow for more favorable high-altitude winds over the Guiana Space Center.

The early hours of Aeolus's mission appeared to go according to plan. ESA officials said the satellite extended its power-generating solar panels on time, and the first three days of the mission will focus on activations of key spacecraft systems, putting the observatory into a stable configuration for testing.

"Then we start switching on the laser and the instrument," Elfving said. "That will take around two weeks if it goes well, but it could take longer because there's a lot of tuning and observing of this high-energy laser. We don't want to damage anything if we have any wrong settings. In October, we expect to start collecting and calibrating data."

Scientists will meticulously compare Aeolus's data with wind measurements collected by airplanes. The calibration campaign will extend into next year, ensuring accuracy of the satellite's measurements.

"That will go on until the second quarter of 2019, and by that moment, we hope to have declared the quality such that meteorologists ... can start ingesting our data operationally," Elfving said.

Aeolus is the fifth in a series of ESA's Earth Explorer missions, a line of satellite projects designed to make measurements of a specific part of the Earth's land, sea, or atmospheric environments, while making advancements in technology for future Earth observation missions.

"Aeolus epitomizes the essence of an Earth Explorer," said Jan Woerner, ESA's director general, in a statement. "It will fill a gap in our knowledge of how the planet functions and demonstrate how cutting-edge technology can be used in space."

The next launch for Arianespace is scheduled for September, when the 100th flight of an Ariane 5 rocket is set to haul two commercial communications satellites into orbit. That mission will also mark the 300th launch managed by Arianespace since its formation.

The Vega rocket's next flight is scheduled for no earlier than December, with the Italian Space Agency's experimental PRISMA mission to test a new type of Earth-imaging camera in orbit.
[свернуть]

tnt22

ЦитироватьAeolus highlights

European Space Agency, ESA

Опубликовано: 23 авг. 2018 г.
(2:36)

tnt22

ЦитироватьWhy measure wind?

European Space Agency, ESA

Опубликовано: 23 авг. 2018 г.

Learn how Earth's wind is generated and why we need to measure it. Discover how ESA's Aeolus satellite will use laser technology to measure these invisible streams of air to help understand our climate and to improve our weather forecasts.
(3:37)

tnt22

ЦитироватьESA Operations‏Подлинная учетная запись @esaoperations 1 ч. назад

Home sweet home ! The first full tracking station pass with #Aeolus has just begun from the #EarthExplorers "Dedicated Control Room" - now home for #Aeolus operations for its life in orbit


tnt22

#170
ЦитироватьESA Operations‏Подлинная учетная запись @esaoperations 47 мин. назад

#Aeolushas today reached a vital stage in it's new life in space! After the critical first days in orbit, the #spacecraft is now ready for commissioning, inc. switching on the hypermodern Aladin lidar instrument.
Read more about this milestone...

http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Operations/Wind_mission_ready_for_next_phase ...



ESA‏Подлинная учетная запись @esa 10 мин. назад

Teams at the @esaoperations control centre in Germany have declared today that the critical first phase for #Aeolus, Europe's wind mission launched on Wednesday, is complete.

Details:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Operations/Wind_mission_ready_for_next_phase ...


tnt22

НОРАД идентифицировал объект запуска

tnt22

ЦитироватьArianespace Flight VV12 / Behind the Scenes of the Dream

arianespace

Опубликовано: 28 авг. 2018 г.

Arianespace has successfully launched the European Space Agency's (ESA) Aeolus satellite, the first space mission designed to acquire profiles of Earth's winds on a global scale.

The launch took place on Wednesday, August 22, 2018 at 6:20 p.m. (local time) from the Guiana Space Center (CSG), Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana (South America).

This launch was the fifth of the year for Arianespace, the first with Vega and the 12th successful launch in a row of this light launcher.

This innovative mission once again clearly demonstrates Arianespace's commitment to sustainable development, and to guaranteeing independent access to space for Europe.
(0:56)

tnt22

ЦитироватьAeolus quick steps to launch

European Space Agency, ESA

Опубликовано: 14 сент. 2018 г.

This time-lapse video shows ESA's #Aeolus satellite being prepared for liftoff. It includes shots from the cleanroom in France, its arrival by ship in French Guiana, preparations at Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, roll out to the launch pad and, finally, liftoff on a Vega rocket on 22 August 2018.

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.
(3:28 )

tnt22

ЦитироватьESA Euronews: Favourable winds for Aeolus

European Space Agency, ESA

Опубликовано: 21 сент. 2018 г.

This edition of #Space comes fr om the coast of northern Norway, wh ere we've come to the Andøya Space Centre to meet scientists working on a new satellite called Aeolus. This mission carries revolutionary laser technology to measure the wind around the entire globe. Lofted into orbit in August 2018 on a Vega rocket from French Guiana, Aeolus has only just begun its life in space. Engineers are now busy commissioning the mission to ensure that it will soon be ready to deliver novel data on winds. This will be used to improve our understanding of the atmosphere and to improve weather forecasts.
(8:46)

tnt22

ЦитироватьFlying under Aeolus

European Space Agency, ESA

Опубликовано: 7 февр. 2019 г.

Following the launch of Aeolus on 22 August 2018, scientists have been busy fine-tuning and calibrating this latest Earth Explorer satellite. Aeolus carries a revolutionary instrument, which comprises a powerful laser, a large telescope and a very sensitive receiver. It works by emitting short, powerful pulses – 50 pulses per second – of ultraviolet light from a laser down into the atmosphere. The instrument then measures the backscattered signals from air molecules, dust particles and water droplets to provide vertical profiles that show the speed of the world's winds in the lowermost 30 km of the atmosphere. These measurements are needed to improve weather forecasts. As part of the working being done to calibrate this novel mission, scientists have been taking similar measurements from an aircraft carrying an airborne version of Aeolus' instrument. The pilot flies the plane under the satellite as it orbits above so that measurements of wind can be compared.
(5:27)

PIN

Увы, есть реальный шанс не выдавать "науку" 3 года
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-48259237

tnt22

Цитировать ESA Operations‏ Подлинная учетная запись @esaoperations 54 мин. назад

This morning, @ESA's #Aeolus Earth observation satellite fired its thrusters, moving it off a collision course with a @SpaceX satellite in their #Starlink constellation


tnt22

Цитировать ESA Operations‏ Подлинная учетная запись @esaoperations 1 ч. назад

For the first time ever, ESA has performed a 'collision avoidance manoeuvre' to protect one of its satellites from colliding with a 'mega constellation' #SpaceTraffic


tnt22

https://ria.ru/20190902/1558178754.html
ЦитироватьЕвропейский спутник уклонился от столкновения с аппаратом Маска
18:15 02.09.2019

МОСКВА, 2 сен - РИА Новости. Европейский спутник наблюдения Земли Aeolus выполнил маневр, чтобы не столкнуться с одним из космических аппаратов орбитальной группировки связи Starlink, развертываемой компанией SpaceX Илона Маска, сообщило Европейское космическое агентство (ЕКА).

Как отметило агентство в Twitter, для этого спутник Aeolus включил двигатели, в результате чего перешел на более высокую орбиту. Маневр уклонения был осуществлен впервые в истории ЕКА.

Спутник Aeolus был выведен на орбиту в августе 2018 года.

Starlink - спутниковая сеть следующего поколения, способная обеспечить землян широкополосным доступом в интернет. Практическая реализация проекта началась в феврале 2018 года с выводом на орбиту двух тестовых спутников - Tintin-A и Tintin-B. Всего планируется запустить около 12 тысяч спутников. SpaceX оценивала затраты на реализацию проекта Starlink в 10 миллиардов долларов, но эксперты считают эту цифру заниженной. Первые 60 спутников Starlink были запущены в мае 2019 года.

Ранее представитель ЦНИИмаша (головной научный институт "Роскосмоса") Юрий Колюка сообщил, что около 250 разрушений космических объектов (действующие и недействующие спутники, отработавшие ступени ракет-носителей и разгонные блоки) зафиксировано на орбите с 1961 года, когда произошло первое подобное событие. По его словам, разрушения космических объектов происходили либо в результате их взрывов, либо после столкновения с другими объектами.
[свернуть]