El programa científico de la Agencia Espacial Europea
Abstract
The rendezvous of the spatial mission Rosetta with the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and the spectacular deployment of the Philae lander to its surface marked the conclusion of the European Space Agency's (ESA's) scientific program Horizon 2000, 30 years after it had been conceived, back in 1985. Three of its cornerstone missions continue today observing and producing first quality science. They are: i) the solar observatory SOHO (a common mission with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration of the U.S.A.), which together with the Cluster mission studies the Sun, the solar plasma and the magnetosphere; ii) the X-ray astronomical observatory XMM-Newton and iii) the already mentioned Rosetta. The other cornerstone mission, the infrared observatory Herschel, concluded its operational phase around two years ago. From the following program (Horizon 2000+, conceived in 1995) one of its large projects, GAIA, is already obtaining astrometry of stars at the micro arc second level, while the Mercury exploration mission BepiColombo is in the final stages of preparation for a launch in early 2017. Another ten middle and small class missions, many of them still active, complete the suite Horizon 2000/2000+. The next large program, Cosmic Vision, has been conceived ten years ago and it is called to cover ESA's science activities of the next 15 years. Six of the missions composing the program have been already approved (JUICE, Athena, Solar Orbiter, Euclid, Plato and Cheops), with the aim of giving answers to the following four fundamental scientific questions: 1) What are the conditions for planet formation and the emergence of life, 2) How does the Solar System work, 3) What are the fundamental physical laws of the Universe, and 4) How did the Universe originate and what is it made of. In this report we'll try to discuss the background and the contributions of astrophysical space missions and planetary sciences of the scientifically most productive period in the history of ESA. We will discuss also some of the main technical characteristics as well as the scientific and technological challenges they represent.
- Publication:
-
Boletin de la Asociacion Argentina de Astronomia La Plata Argentina
- Pub Date:
- August 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016BAAA...58..183G
- Keywords:
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- instrumentation: detectors;
- instrumentation: high angular resolution;
- instrumentation: interferometers;
- methods: data analysis;
- methods: observational;
- space vehicles;
- space vehicles: instruments;
- astronomical databases: miscellaneous;
- astrometry