ESAHomeUnderstanding Our PlanetSecuring Our EnvironmentBenefiting Our Economy
   
About Observing the Earth
How does Earth Observation work?How to get Earth Observation dataIntegrating Earth Observation in your jobEarth Observation users speak
EO programmes
The Living PlanetGMES
ESA's Earth Observing missions
Envisat overviewERS overviewEarth Explorers overviewSentinels overviewMSG overviewMetOp overviewProba-1 overviewThird Party Missions overview
Opportunities with us
Multimedia
Services
CalendarSubscribe Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
Article Images
France's soaring Millau bridge seen from orbit
 
3 January 2005

Millau bridge - December
This black and white High Resolution Camera (HRC) image of the newly-opened Millau bridge in southern France was acquired by ESA's Proba microsatellite on 11 December 2004. The bridge is the world's highest road bridge.
 
 
Millau bridge
Download:
 HI-RES JPG (Size: 699 kb)
People look at the Millau bridge, the world's tallest traffic bridge, Thursday, Dec. 9, 2004, in Millau, France. Construction workers have nearly completed work on the roadway of the bridge, a viaduct that soars over a valley in southern France. The bridge, reaching about 270 meters (890 feet) at its highest point, was inaugurated by President Jacques Chirac on Dec. 14 and opened to traffic on Dec. 17.

Credits: AP Photo/Christophe Ena
 
 
This black and white High Resolution Camera (HRC) image of the unfinished Millau bridge in southern France was acquired by ESA's Proba microsatellite on 14 March 2004. The bridge is the world's highest road bridge.
 
 
Chirac and Sir Norman Foster
Download:
 HI-RES JPG (Size: 833 kb)
French President Jacques Chirac, left, chats with British architect Lord Norman Foster during the inauguration of the Millau brige, southern France, Tuesday Dec.14, 2004. Now that it is open, it enables motorists to take a drive through the sky , 270 meters (891 feet) above the Tarn River valley for a 2.5 kilometer (1.6 mile) stretch through France's Massif Central mountains. Lord Foster designed the bridge.

Credits: AP Photo/Patrick Kovarik, Pool
 
  About Proba
 
Artist's impression of Proba-1 in orbit
Download:
 HI-RES PNG (Size: 839 kb)
Proba-1, Project for On Board Autonomy, demonstrates the potential and feasibility of small satellites for advanced scientific and Earth Observation missions.

Credits: ESA
 
 
Related news
Three years of Proba, the 'smart' satellite that runs itselfMicro-satellite steers by the stars to return views of EarthESA's miniature Earth observer put to many uses
In depth
Proba-1 overview
Related links
Sira Technology LtdVerhaertMillau viaduct
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2010 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.