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ESA Top Multimedia

ESA Top Multimedia

Celeste: Countdown to Launch 1

On 25 March, the first two satellites of the Celeste in-orbit demonstration mission will lift off aboard Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket from the company’s Māhia Launch Complex in New Zealand.

Celeste will play a pioneering role in elevating the future of Europe’s satellite navigation capabilities.

As ESA’s initiative for satellite navigation in low Earth orbit (LEO-PNT), the mission will be testing next-generation technologies and add new frequency bands for satellite navigation to inform the deployment of a future European operational navigation system in low Earth orbit. 

The mission will begin with two demonstrator satellites, IOD1-2, to secure and test the assigned frequency filings and transmit representative navigation signals until the end of the year.

The two satellites consist of two CubeSats (12U and 16U respectively), both developed by two consortia composed by a wide set of European players, one led by GMV (Spain) and the other led by Thales Alenia Space (France).

Learn more about Celeste: https://www.esa.int/Celeste/

Spectrum on the launch pad under Northern Lights

Spectrum on the launch pad under Northern Lights

Flyeye: ESA’s automated asteroid hunters (with subtitles)

Asteroids can strike from any direction, but it is impossible to keep an eye on the entire sky… or is it?

As part of the global effort to detect potentially hazardous asteroids and comets, ESA is developing a series of automated telescopes to scan the sky each night.

The ‘Flyeye’ telescopes take inspiration, and their name, from the large compound eye of an insect, which has evolved over millions of years to detect motion – and therefore potential danger – from almost any direction.

With their unique design, the Flyeye telescopes can capture a region of the night sky that is over 200 times as large as the full Moon in a single image, while maintaining the high image quality needed to detect the motion of even very faint objects.

ESA’s Space Safety programme plans to deploy a network of ‘Flyeye’ telescopes around the world that will work together to carry out nightly sky surveys and automatically identify possible new Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) – especially any that could impact our planet.

These discoveries will be confirmed by astronomers in ESA’s Planetary Defence Office before being submitted to the Minor Planet Center, the global sorting house for asteroid observations. From there, the newly discovered objects will trigger follow-up observations and, if necessary, a planetary defence response.

Click here for the unsubtitled version of the video. 

Mackenzie River

Mackenzie River

Artemis II rolls again

Artemis II rocket back at its launchpad after a second rollout at NASA's Kennedy Space Center

3 weeks and 3 cargo departures for εpsilon

This video was published on social media by ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot with the following caption:

Day 035, orbit 0541 – Three cargo vehicles departing the Station in just three weeks… and since I recorded this video, we also waved goodbye to a Progress!

The Northrop Grumman Cygnus NG23 was named S.S. William “Willie” McCool in honor of the NASA astronaut and naval aviator test pilot who perished in the 2003 Space Shuttle Columbia accident. Following a U.S. Navy tradition, Jack – who shares the same professional background – rang the Station bell to mark the spacecraft’s departure.

Follow Sophie’s mission on the εpsilon page and on her social media platforms, such as X, FacebookInstagramLinkedIn

Earth from Space: Jostedalsbreen, Norway

Ahead of the World Day for Glaciers, Copernicus Sentinel-2 captures the diverse landscape of western Norway with its jagged fjords, fertile valleys, mountain plateaus and Jostedalsbreen, the largest glacier in continental Europe.

Juice's NavCam video of 3I/ATLAS cruising through space

During Juice's 3I/ATLAS observation campaign on November 2025, 53 photographs of the interstellar object were taken using the spacecraft's Navigation Camera (NavCam). The resolution of the images used to make this video is 512 x 512 pixels.

Proba-3's Coronagraph captured by the Occulter

Proba-3's Coronagraph captured by the Occulter

345th ESA Council: Media information session

Watch the replay of the media information session where ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher and ESA Council Chair Renato Krpoun outline the key decisions and main outcomes of the Council meeting held in Interlaken, Switzerland, on 18 and 19 March 2026.

First picture from Cupola by ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot

First picture from Cupola by ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot during the εpsilon mission

Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS): November 2025

Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS; Nov 2025)

Plato’s journey to L2

The European Space Agency’s mission Plato is set to launch at the beginning of 2027 on a quest to find Earth-like planets orbiting stars similar to our Sun. The spacecraft will board the Ariane 6 with two boosters for a launch from Europe’s Spaceport, in French Guiana.

After lift-off, Plato will travel towards the  Sun-Earth Lagrange point L2. This animation shows Plato’s first moments in space and its trajectory towards L2. This is an equilibrium point of the Sun-Earth system that revolves around the Sun together with Earth. It is located 1.5 million kilometres from Earth in the direction opposite the Sun.

The spacecraft will approach this point after a one-month journey and then enter a large-amplitude orbit around it.

To hunt for exoplanets, Plato is equipped with 26 ultrasensitive cameras. They are specially designed to capture the tiniest variations in the intensity of a star’s light and thus spot the dimming effect caused by planets passing in front of their host stars.

The mission’s focus is to discover planets that circle Sun-like stars in the habitable zone – the ‘Goldilocks’ region, where the temperature is just right for liquid water to exist on a planet’s surface. These planets take several months to complete an orbit because of their distance from the host star: not too close, not too far. To spot them, Plato’s 26 eyes will stare at the same region of the sky continuously for a minimum of two years, during a mission that is planned to last at least 4 years.

During these long observations, the spacecraft must be periodically reoriented to ensure that the solar arrays are pointed towards the Sun. This is achieved by rotating the spacecraft by 90° roughly every 3 months, as shown in the animation.

At L2, Plato will join other space missions orbiting around this special point such as the ESA Euclid mission and the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope

Sophie Adenot getting ready for an EchoFinder session

ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot is seen preparing for an EchoFinder session aboard the International Space Station during the εpsilon mission.

Recap événement Grand Rex

Recap de l’événement au Grand Rex à Paris le 22 février pour le lancement de la mission εpsilon.

Integration of Celeste In-Orbit Demonstration CubeSats at Rocket Lab’s Māhia Launch Complex

Integration of Celeste In-Orbit Demonstration CubeSats at Rocket Lab’s Māhia Launch Complex

Earth’s magnetic field during solar flare, January 2026

Over a few days in January 2026, a particularly strong X-class solar flare caused a geomagnetic storm in Earth’s atmosphere, with some of the most intense radiation storms on record. The cause was an eruption on the Sun’s surface, which released high energy particles that reached Earth within 25 hours. ESA’s ice mission, CryoSat had just received an important software update, enabling the mission to not only monitor polar ice sheets and sea ice, but to also provide scientific data on Earth’s magnetic field.

As shown in this video, data from CryoSat, together with data from two of Swarm’s satellites, as well as data from the Macau Science Satellite-1 (MMS-1) and NASA’s GRACE-FO satellite, was used to model the intensity of the disturbance in Earth’s magnetic field, caused by the solar flare. The colours on the map represent intensity extremes, with the dark orange indicating where Earth’s magnetic field increased in strength, while the dark blue indicates where the magnetic field got weaker. The magnetic intensity highs and lows over the three-day period in 19-22 January illustrates the disturbance in Earth’s magnetosphere.

The Disturbance Storm Time (DST) index, shown below the map, indicates the severity of geomagnetic storms, measured in nano-Tesla (nT). The more negative the DST value, the stronger the storm, suggesting that the storm was at its most powerful just after mid-day on 20 January.

Read full story: How does an ice satellite detect a geomagnetic storm?

Plato readies for space-like tests

The European Space Agency’s mission to discover Earth-like exoplanets, Plato, is now sealed in the Large Space Simulator (LSS) chamber at ESA’s Test Centre for a series of vital tests under space‑like conditions.

Engineers placed Plato in the LSS on 18 February, and since the beginning of March the spacecraft has been experiencing the extreme temperatures and vacuum of space. This photo captures the satellite standing in the centre of the simulator, moments before the chamber was bolted closed.

The picture was taken from the top opening of the LSS and gives us a direct view of Plato’s 26 ultrasensitive cameras. These are the special eyes that the mission will use to monitor more than 150 000 bright stars at the same time, hunting for terrestrial planets orbiting Sun-like stars.

The mission is expected to be ready for launch by the end of the year. Liftoff on an Ariane 6 is planned by Arianespace for January 2027.

But before launching a spacecraft, it is crucial to operate it and check all its functionalities in a space-like environment. The LSS offers just that.

A cylindrical container standing 15 m high and 10 m wide, the LSS is Europe's largest cryovacuum chamber. Equipped with a high-performance pump, the enclosure achieves a pressure a billion times lower than the sea-level atmospheric pressure, while liquid nitrogen circulating around its casing reproduces the extreme low temperatures of space.

Exposed to a grid of powerful heating elements (so-called ‘calrods’) that simulate the heat of the Sun, the backside of the spacecraft – with solar panels and sunshield – reaches a toasty 160 °C. At the same time, thanks to the sunshield and excellent insulation, the cameras and the optical bench facing the dark, cold part of the chamber are kept very cool at around –80 °C, as if facing deep space. 
Plato will reemerge from the space simulator at the end of March.

[Image description: Photo taken looking down into a black‑walled cylinder, at the bottom of which sits a large satellite with black panels and golden surfaces. On top of the spacecraft, we see the blue, shiny lenses of 26 large cameras. The cameras are mounted on a five‑stepped platform and arranged in four rows of six cameras, plus a top row with two cameras.]

A cosmic ray simulator for extreme science on Earth

A cosmic ray simulator for extreme science on Earth

Earth from Space: Maritime highways in the Øresund Strait

This image from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission shows us the maritime traffic passing through the Øresund Strait in 2025.

CELESTE pre-launch media briefing

Watch the replay of the CELESTE pre-launch media briefing. The briefing covered the mission details of the ahead of the inaugural launch of ESA’s Celeste LEO-PNT in-orbit demonstration constellation. The first two satellites are scheduled to lift off no earlier than 24 March aboard Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket from New Zealand.

Former NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps visits ESTEC

Former NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps visits ESTEC

Sophie Adenot shares an inspiring message from the ISS for International Women’s Day

[EN] “Believe in your dreams, believe in yourself, and believe in that little nothing, that εpsilon, that can change everything…”

ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot, currently on board the International Space Station for the εpsilon mission, shared an inspiring message on Sunday 8 March 2026 to mark International Women’s Day.

[FR] « Croyez en vous. Croyez en vos rêves et en ce petit rien, cet εpsilon, qui peut changer une trajectoire… »

L’astronaute de l’ESA Sophie Adenot, actuellement à bord de la Station spatiale internationale pour la mission εpsilon, a partagé un message inspirant à l’occasion de la Journée internationale des droits des femmes, le dimanche 8 mars 2026.

Fireball over Europe, 8 March 2026

At approximately 18:55 CET (17:55 UTC) on Sunday 8 March 2026, a very bright fireball moving from the southwest to the northeast was observed by many people in Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.

The fireball glowed for approximately six seconds, leaving a visible trail in the sky before fracturing into pieces. The event was recorded by many dedicated meteor cameras, such as those of the European AllSky7 fireball network, as well as mobile phones and other cameras. Some observers report that the event was audible from the ground.

The Planetary Defence team in ESA’s Space Safety Programme is using all available data to estimate the size of the object. They currently assess it to have been a few metres in diameter. Objects in this size range strike Earth from once every few weeks to once every few years.

Smile arrives in French Guiana

Following a two-week journey from the Netherlands, the Maritime Nantaise Colibri cargo ship carrying the Smile spacecraft docked in Kourou, French Guiana on Thursday 26 February.

Smile was then unloaded, transported to Europe's Spaceport, and then unpacked. During the coming weeks, the spacecraft will go through final preparations for its launch on a Vega-C rocket between 8 April and 7 May.

Find out more

Smile (the Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer) is a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

From space to your plate

From space to your plate

Earth from Space: Dhaka, Bangladesh

These two views from Copernicus Sentinel-2 reveal the landscape transformation in the area around Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh.

Through the Cupola: Sophie Adenot photographs the Solar Array Wings

Through the Cupola: Sophie Adenot photographs the Solar Array Wings

Preparing first Ariane 6 with four boosters and liftoff

Timelapse showing the steps to build the most powerful version of Europe’s Ariane 6 rocket on the launch pad at Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana.

The video shows the central core of the rocket arriving at the launch pad on 21 January 2026, where it was raised upright and placed on the launch table on the same day.

Then launch technicians added the first booster, second booster, third booster and the final, fourth booster over ending on the 22 January. Next the upper part including the 32 Amazon Leo satellites was added to the top of the rocket on 9 February.

On launch day the mobile hangar that houses Ariane 6 was rolled away to reveal the rocket to the stars, followed by liftoff.

This first launch of the four-booster version of Ariane 6, operated by Arianespace, took 32 satellites for Amazon’s Leo constellation to low-Earth orbit. Liftoff occurred at 13:45 local time (16:45 GMT/17:45 CET) on 12 February, with separation of the last satellites occurring after 114 minutes.

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