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Long-distance relationship
Long-distance relationshipFly through Webb’s cosmic vistas
On the launch anniversary of the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope, ESA presents a unique compilation of zooms into stunning cosmic views.
So embark on a special journey: as if aboard a virtual spaceship, this video will take you through interstellar dives into the rich realm of our Universe. We will visit colourful nebulas and dynamic star nurseries in our own galaxy. Then venture beyond, to travel to the distant reaches of the cosmos and marvel at interacting galaxies and huge galaxy clusters.
The largest space telescope ever, Webb was launched on Christmas Day in 2021, on an Ariane 5 rocket from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana. It performed its first scientific observations in July 2022. Since then, the powerful telescope has been tirelessly exploring the Universe, from the solar neighbourhood to the most distant galaxies.
Happy fourth anniversary, Webb!
Circumstellar disc IRAS 23077+6707
Circumstellar disc IRAS 23077+6707Euclid’s galaxy garland
Euclid image of galaxy NGC 646Galileo: the journey of satellites 33 and 34
On 17 December 2025, two new Galileo satellites lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana. This was the 14th launch for Europe’s satellite navigation operational satellite programme, reinforcing Europe’s resilience and autonomy. The flight, VA266, was the first launch of Galileo satellites on Europe’s newest heavy-lift launcher Ariane 6.
The satellites, designated SAT 33 and SAT 34, separated from the launcher after a flight of just under four hours. The launch was declared successful after acquisition of signal and the confirmation that both satellites are healthy with their solar arrays deployed.
“With these new satellites, we strengthen Europe’s global navigation services - delivering greater precision, reliability and autonomy in space”, affirmed Andrius Kubilius, EU Commissioner for Defence and Space.
“Galileo stands as the world’s most accurate global navigation satellite system – and today we have increased its reliability and robustness,” said Josef Aschbacher, ESA’s Director General.
The European Space Agency was responsible for carrying out the Galileo launch with Arianespace on behalf of the European Commission. The Galileo satellites were manufactured by OHB, under contract with ESA. Now in orbit, the EU Agency for the Space Programme (EUSPA) brings the satellites into service and oversees their operation.
Introducing the 250 N ARIEL thruster
Spanish company Arkadia is developing a thruster called ARIEL (Attitude for Reusable and Innovative European Launchers). Many satellites and rockets have two types of engines, one for moving large distances and one for controlling their orientation, or attitude. This thruster has been developed to be part of a reliable and affordable Reaction Control System that adjusts orientation of space transportation vehicles.
ARIEL uses hydrogen peroxide as fuel which is more sustainable and less toxic than the hydrazine commonly used in most reaction control systems. It is one of the first hydrogen peroxide monopropellant thrusters of this size in Europe. Providing thrust of up to 250 N, it could suspend a 25 kg sack of cement on Earth, more than enough to orient a spacecraft or steer a rocket.
The European Space Agency (ESA) Future Launchers Preparatory Programme (FLPP) prepares European industry for the future space ecosystem, supporting companies with promising technology for the future. The first test firing was done just seven months after signing the initial contract in June 2023. The engine has now passed an extensive test campaign at the Arkadia Space Test Center in the Castellón airport, Spain, reaching technology readiness level six within two years from the contract signature.
The project includes tank prototypes that feed the ARIEL thrusters with its propellant, even operating in efficient ‘blowdown mode’ whereby the hydrogen peroxide gases in the tank push the liquid fuel to the engine.
Arkadia built a test bench inhouse to withstand the thrust and long burns over repeated cycles needed to thoroughly test ARIEL.
Throughout the campaign ARIEL proved itself by performing:
- over 178 seconds of specific impulse in vacuum
- continued steady firing up to 5 minutes
- firing in short pulses of just 40 milliseconds
- over 2000 pulses in total per engine
- over 100 kg of hydrogen peroxide fired per engine
Earth from Space: Manicouagan crater
Webb: Dwarf stars in a glittering sky
Dwarf stars in a glittering skyGalactic gas makes a getaway
Galactic gas makes a getawayFomalhaut cs1 and cs2 (clean image)
Fomalhaut cs1 and cs2 (clean image)342nd Council: Media information session
Watch the replay of the media information session in which ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher and ESA Council Chair Renato Krpoun (CH) update journalists on key decisions taken at the ESA Council meeting, held at ESA Headquarters in Paris on 17 and 18 December 2025.
A first in space autonomy
ESA has achieved a historic milestone, autonomous formation flying with millimetre-level precision.
“Proba-3 proves that bold in-orbit experimentation is essential to turning breakthrough ideas into real space capabilities. ESA does not just design innovation, it flies it”, explains Ian Carnelli, ESA Head of Systems Department.
With PROBA-3, two spacecraft operate as one distributed system - fully autonomously, without guidance from Earth.
Powered by on-board autonomous vision and optical and laser metrology, they detect each other from kilometres away, rendezvous, and maintain an ultra-stable formation in orbit.
At the core of PROBA-3:
- Cooperative and non-cooperative navigation
- Autonomous GNC and manoeuvring capability
- On-board formation management
- Autonomous safety & collision avoidance
The result
A virtual rigid structure in orbit, reconfigurable and resizable, with no continuous ground control or manual intervention. Just trusted onboard intelligence. PROBA-3 is not a demo. It is a blueprint for next-generation space systems and represents how Europe is leading autonomous spaceflight.
“Proba-3 shows why in-orbit technology demonstration matters. ESA deliberately takes bold technical risks in space, pushes systems beyond what has ever flown before, and delivers. This is how ground-breaking technologies become operational capabilities , not on paper, but in orbit”, says Damien, the Proba-3 mission manager.
Gaia finds hints of planets in baby star systems
Ever wondered how planetary systems like our own Solar System form? Thanks to the European Space Agency’s Gaia space telescope, we're getting a unique peek behind the cosmic curtain into these dusty environments.
In this collage, we see the images of 31 baby star systems. Click on the white dots next to each system to find out more about them. The bar on the top right shows the scale of the image in Astronomical Units (AU).
The collage also shows our own Solar System for reference on the bottom right, as it is predicted to have looked at an age of 1 million years, with the Sun at its centre (not visible).
All of the systems are centred around very young stars that have recently collapsed from vast clouds of gas and dust.
After the clouds collapsed under their own gravity, they spun faster and flattened into discs with hot, dense centres. These centres became the stars, sometimes multiple stars were formed. The discs around them are called protoplanetary discs.
The 31 baby systems are shown here in orange-purple, as seen by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) ground-based telescope.
Astronomers expect the remaining material in protoplanetary discs to clump together to form planets, but until now it’s been very difficult to spot them because of all the dust and gas present in discs. To date, very few planets have been detected around forming stars.
Enter Gaia.
In 31 out of 98 young star systems, Gaia has detected subtle motions that suggest the presence of unseen companions. For seven of these systems, the observed motions are consistent with objects of planetary mass. In eight systems, the data best match the presence of brown dwarfs – objects larger than planets but smaller than stars. The remaining sixteen systems likely have additional stars around.
Gaia’s predicted locations of these companions in the systems are shown in cyan. In the reference image of our baby Solar System, Jupiter’s orbit is also shown in cyan.
Gaia discovered the companions in the baby star systems thanks to its unique ability to sense the gravitational tug or ‘wobble’ a planet or companion induces on a star. This technique had already been used to find companions around older stars. But now, for the first time, a team of astronomers led by Miguel Vioque of the European Southern Observatory, Germany, has used this Gaia technique to find planets and companions around stars that are still forming.
The all-sky, large-scale nature of the Gaia survey enabled the team to study hundreds of forming stars and identify companions across large samples for the first time. This in contrast to costly ground-based searches that can only target a few stars at a time.
This ability of Gaia is revolutionising the field of star and planet formation. The companions that the telescope has already found, can now be followed up by telescopes like the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space telescope that can study the inner discs of the baby systems in more detail.
With Gaia’s upcoming fourth data release, many more hidden planets are expected to be uncovered.
This new finding has been described in ‘Astrometric view of companions in the inner dust cavities of protoplanetary disks’ by M. Vioque et al., accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics.
[Image description: A collage of 32 glowing discs on a black background. Each disc shows concentric rings in vivid colours: purple, orange, and yellow, with bright cyan centres. The discs vary in size and orientation, creating a striking pattern of circular and elliptical shapes.]
Replay: Galileo L14 launch coverage
On 17 December, two new Galileo satellites lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana aboard an Ariane 6 rocket. This marked the 14th launch for Europe’s satellite navigation operational satellite programme, reinforcing Europe’s resilience and autonomy.
The European Space Agency (ESA) is responsible for carrying out the Galileo launch with Arianespace on behalf of the European Commission. The Galileo satellites were manufactured by OHB, under contract with ESA. Once in orbit, the EU Agency for the Space Programme (EUSPA) will bring the satellites into service and oversee their operation.
The flight, designated VA266, was the first launch of Galileo satellites on Europe’s newest heavy-lift launcher Ariane 6.
Galileo launch 14 liftoff
Galileo launch 14 liftoffGalileo L14 launch highlights
On 17 December, two new Galileo satellites lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana aboard an Ariane 6 rocket. This marked the 14th launch for Europe’s satellite navigation operational satellite programme, reinforcing Europe’s resilience and autonomy.
The European Space Agency (ESA) is responsible for carrying out the Galileo launch with Arianespace on behalf of the European Commission. The Galileo satellites were manufactured by OHB, under contract with ESA. Once in orbit, the EU Agency for the Space Programme (EUSPA) will bring the satellites into service and oversee their operation.
The flight, designated VA266, was the first launch of Galileo satellites on Europe’s newest heavy-lift launcher Ariane 6.
Proba-3 fills the solar observation gap
The ASPIICS coronagraph aboard ESA’s formation-flying Proba-3 mission is able to observe the Sun’s corona in the gap between the fields of view of solar extreme-ultraviolet imagers and conventional coronagraphs, making it uniquely suited for studies of the inner solar corona.
This time-lapse animation captures a coronal mass ejection (CME) in the top right, combining observations made on 16 July over a period of one hour and a half by three different European instruments aboard different missions: the Sun’s disc and low corona (artificially coloured in yellow), as captured by an extreme-ultraviolet telescope (SWAP) aboard Proba-2; the outer corona (in red) observed by the LASCO C2 coronagraph aboard SOHO; and the inner corona (in green), imaged in detail by Proba-3’s ASPIICS coronagraph, filling the gap.
Andrei Zhukov from the Royal Observatory of Belgium, Principal Investigator for the ASPIICS coronagraph on Proba-3, comments: “You can see the CME starting at the edge of the solar disc, captured by Proba-2. Then it extends into the inner coronal region, which is now visible to us thanks to Proba-3, before reaching the high corona observed by SOHO. The continuity with which we can now observe the CME structure extend outwards from the Sun is incredible.”
Europe at night from space
Galileo L14 liftoff on Ariane 6
On 17 December, two new Galileo satellites lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana aboard an Ariane 6 rocket. This marked the 14th launch for Europe’s satellite navigation operational satellite programme, reinforcing Europe’s resilience and autonomy.
The European Space Agency (ESA) is responsible for carrying out the Galileo launch with Arianespace on behalf of the European Commission. The Galileo satellites were manufactured by OHB, under contract with ESA. Once in orbit, the EU Agency for the Space Programme (EUSPA) will bring the satellites into service and oversee their operation.
The flight, designated VA266, was the first launch of Galileo satellites on Europe’s newest heavy-lift launcher Ariane 6.
Ariane 6 for Galileo
Europe’s newest rocket Ariane 6 was made for Galileo.
This video shows a launch of two Galileo navigation satellites on an Ariane 6 rocket.
Ariane and Galileo have a long history together, with 12 satellites launched aboard three Ariane 5 rockets. Ariane 6, the new generation of Europe’s heavy-lift launcher, is taking over as the reference for launching Galileo satellites.
The world’s most precise satellite navigation system, Galileo serves billions of daily users from medium Earth orbit 23 222 km above Earth’s surface. Galileo is also making a difference across key sectors, including rail, maritime, agriculture, financial timing services and rescue operations.
On behalf of the European Commission, the European Space Agency (ESA) is responsible for the design, development and qualification of Galileo's space and ground systems as well as procuring the launches. The European Union Agency for the Space Programme (EUSPA) operates the satellites from the Early Orbit Phase of their operational mission until their disposal at the end of life.
Ariane 6 is a key element of ESA’s efforts to ensure autonomous access to space for Europe’s citizens. Its modular and versatile design allows it to launch all types of missions, from low-Earth orbit to deep space.
Ariane 6 is designed and built by ArianeGroup. It has three main components each working in stages to escape Earth’s gravity and take satellites to orbit: two or four boosters, and a core and upper stage. For this launch, the rocket will be in its two-booster configuration.
The core stage and the boosters provide thrust for the first phase of flight. The core stage is powered by the Vulcain 2.1 engine (fuelled by liquid oxygen and hydrogen), with the main thrust at liftoff provided by the P120C boosters.
The upper stage is powered by the reignitable Vinci engine, also fuelled by liquid oxygen and hydrogen. The upper stage will fire two times to reach the required orbit for this mission.
After separation of the Galileo satellites, the Ariane 6 upper stage moves to a stable graveyard orbit far away from operational satellites.
ESA’s InCubed programme
InCubed is the European Space Agency’s Earth observation programme for ‘Investing in Industrial Innovation’. It aims to foster commercial innovation, boost the European Earth observation economy and reinforce relationships with the private investor community. It achieves this by working with entrepreneurs to develop innovative and commercially viable products and services that generate or exploit the value of Earth observation imagery and datasets. As a commercially driven programme run by ESA Φ-lab, InCubed exemplifies ESA’s role as a partner to industry and a supporter of business and technology innovation.
Sea-level height in the Gulf Stream, by Sentinel-6B
Coronal mass ejection captured by Proba-2, Proba-3 and SOHO
Coronal mass ejection captured by Proba-2, Proba-3 and SOHOXRISM sees comet 3I/ATLAS in X-ray light
XRISM sees comet 3I/ATLAS in X-ray lightESA highlights 2025
2025 was a landmark year for Europe in space. From celebrating 50 years of ESA to new missions, scientific breakthroughs, the year reaffirmed Europe’s leadership in science, exploration, climate action and innovation.
Methane from landfill site
Pablo Álvarez Fernández | Spacesuits, Survival & Spacewalk Dreams | ESA Explores #18
Step inside astronaut training with ESA astronaut Pablo Álvarez Fernández as he shares his training journey from Cologne in Germany to Houston in the US. Discover what it’s like to wear a 145 kg spacesuit underwater, train for emergencies like fires and ammonia leaks and prepare for the ultimate astronaut dream: a spacewalk. Plus, Pablo talks about life in Houston, teamwork under pressure and what’s next on his path to the stars.
This interview was recorded in December 2024.
You can listen to this episode on all major podcast platforms.
Keep exploring with ESA Explores!
XMM-Newton sees comet 3I/ATLAS in X-ray light
XMM-Newton sees comet 3I/ATLAS in X-ray lightGalileo satellite encapsulation
Galileo satellite encapsulationDraco: atmospheric reentry from the inside
Over the nearly 70 years of spaceflight, about 10 000 intact satellites and rocket bodies have reentered the atmosphere with many more to follow. Yet for such a ubiquitous event, we still lack a clear view on what actually happens to a satellite during its fiery last moments.
ESA is preparing the Destructive Reentry Assessment Container Object (Draco) mission that will collect unique measurements during an actual reentry and breakup of a satellite from the inside.
Just hours after its launch, planned in 2027, a capsule especially designed to survive the satellite’s destruction will transmit the collected telemetry shortly after.
As part of ESA’s Zero Debris approach, new ESA missions will be designed for safe operations and disposal to stop the creation of new debris by 2030. New satellites should be ‘designed for demise’: built to disintegrate safely, cleanly and completely when its mission ends.
At the same time, we also need to better understand the effect of satellite reentries on the atmosphere. Yet even with testing on the ground, crucial input based on real-life data of how the break-up process works is missing – for now.
The data from ESA’s Draco mission will improve reentry modelling and design-for-demise technologies, maintaining European leadership in sustainable spaceflight.
Click here for the subtitled version of the video.
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