ESA title
Play
$video.data_map.short_description.content
Applications

Into space and back

10501 views 17 likes
ESA / Applications / Observing the Earth / FutureEO / Aeolus

Aeolus was taken into orbit on 22 August 2018 on a Vega rocket from Europe’s spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.

The European Vega is a single-body rocket with three solid-propellant stages and a liquid-propellant upper module for attitude and orbit control, and satellite release.

Aeolus in the launch tower
Aeolus in the launch tower

With a height of 30 m and diameter of 3 m, the launcher can place 300–1500 kg satellites, into the polar and low-Earth orbits used for many scientific and Earth observation missions.

Development of the launcher started in 1998. The first Vega lifted off on 13 February 2012 on a flawless qualification flight from Europe’s Spaceport, where the Ariane 1 launch facilities have been adapted for its use.

The launch site in Kourou lies at latitude 5°3', just over 500 km north of the equator. French Guiana is sparsely populated and 90% of the country is covered by equatorial forests. In addition, there is no risk of cyclones or earthquakes.

In orbit, Aeolus was operated from ESA’s European Spacecraft Operations Centre in Germany.

Exceeding its planned life in orbit and surpassing its scientific expectations, the Aeolus wind mission has been hailed as one of ESA’s most successful Earth observation missions.

Its end will go down in history too with Agency’s mission control team guiding this remarkable satellite down to Earth’s atmosphere for a safe reentry on 28 July 2023.

Preparing Aeolus's assisted reentry
Preparing Aeolus's assisted reentry

The reentry came after a series of complex manoeuvres that lowered Aeolus’ orbit from an altitude of 320 km to just 120 km to reenter the atmosphere and burn up.

Crucially, these manoeuvres – the first assisted reentry of its kind – positioned Aeolus so that any pieces that may not have burned up in the atmosphere would fall within the satellite’s planned Atlantic ground tracks.

Today, satellite missions are designed according to regulations that require them to minimise the risk of causing damage on their return to Earth. However, when Aeolus was designed back in the late 1990s no such regulations were in place.

ESA therefore went above and beyond for Aeolus and attempted a new way of assisting its reentry to make it even safer, and it worked.

Play
$video.data_map.short_description.content
Aeolus reentry: the breakdown
Access the video

Back to Aeolus homepage

Related Links