
ESA Top Multimedia
RISE: ESA’s mission extender in geostationary orbit (with subtitles)

An essential part of ESA’s Space Safety programme is dedicated to getting and keeping Earth’s orbits clean from space debris. In the long run, the Agency aspires to stimulate a true circular economy in space, minimising the impact of spaceflight on Earth and its resources where possible. 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.
ESA has now taken another important step on the road towards sustainability in space with its first in-orbit servicing mission RISE, planned for launch in 2029.
RISE is a commercial in-orbit servicing mission that will demonstrate that it can safely rendezvous and dock to a geostationary client satellite, extending the life of geostationary satellites that need support with attitude and orbit control, but are otherwise in working order.
After verifying that it meets all the performance standards in a first demonstration, prime contractor, operator and co-founder D-Orbit will start commercial life extension services for geostationary satellites.
ESA’s RISE mission marks a promising step towards enhancing in-orbit services and technologies, such as refuelling, refurbishment and assembling – all essential elements for creating a circular economy in space.
First view of aerosols from MetOp-SG’s 3MI instrument
Defying gravity

Group photo from General Assembly on Defence, Space and Cybersecurity
Group photo taken at the General Assembly on Defence, Space and Cybersecurity, held on Friday 12 September 2025, at ESRIN, ESA’s Centre for Earth Observation Programmes in Italy.
The event was organised by the European Parliament and the European Commission, in collaboration with the European Space Agency, to promote dialogue between European and national decision-makers and industry leaders. Representatives from major European entities debated the future of the European Union, which is facing unprecedented challenges, in an increasingly complex geopolitical context. Participants examined Europe’s needs in key sectors such as space, cybersecurity, and defence, within the broader context of the Atlantic Alliance. Acting at the European level, as demonstrated by projects like Galileo, EGNOS, and Copernicus, not only brings extraordinary added value in terms of innovation, industrial competitiveness, economies of scale, and spending efficiency, but also strengthens Europe’s strategic autonomy, the security of its citizens, and the protection of its critical infrastructure.
The group included experts from major European entities, including: Andrius Kubilius, European Commissioner for Defence and Space; Adolfo Urso, Italian Minister of Enterprises and Made in Italy; Matteo Piantedosi, Italian Minister of the Interior; Gen. B. Luigi Vinciguerra, Brigade General of the Guardia di Finanza – Head of the III Operations Department, General Command; Josef Aschbacher, Director General of the European Space Agency; Simonetta Cheli, Director of Earth Observation Programmes and Head of ESRIN; Carlo Corazza, Head of the European Parliament Office in Italy; Ammiraglio Giuseppe Cavo Dragone, Chairman of the NATO Military Committee; Teodoro Valente, President of the Italian Space Agency (ASI); Hans de Vries, Chief Cybersecurity and Operations Officer (COO) - ENISA; Fabio di Stefano, Communications at the European Parliament in Italy.
Watch here a replay of ESA Director General's intervention and find the transcript of his speech.
ESA Director General's opening remarks at the General Assembly on Defence, Space & Cybersecurity

Watch the replay of ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher’s opening Remarks of the ‘General Assembly Defence, Space and Cybersecurity’ held in ESA, ESRIN on 12 September 2025.
The European Parliament and the European Commission, in collaboration with ESA, organised the ‘General Assembly Defence, Space and Cybersecurity’ to promote dialogue between European and national decision-makers, and industry representatives in the context of the unprecedented challenges that European Union is facing since the postwar period in an increasingly complex geopolitical context.
For this reason, Europe must work to strengthen its strategic autonomy in key sectors such as space, cybersecurity, and defence, within the broader context of the Atlantic Alliance. Acting at the European level in these areas, as demonstrated by projects like Galileo, EGNOS, and Copernicus, brings extraordinary added value in terms of innovation, industrial competitiveness, economies of scale, and spending efficiency, as well as for the security of citizens and the protection of critical infrastructure.
Navigation workforce at 30 years of European satellite navigation

Earth from Space: Gibson Desert, Australia
Blood moon over Concordia

Cloudy cluster

Copernicus Sentinel-1D arrives in French Guiana
Plato unloaded at ESTEC

Immense stellar jet in Milky Way outskirts
Celeste mission patch

Patch of Celeste, the first mission in the LEO-PNT programme. Celeste will demonstrate in orbit the potential of a layer of satellites in low Earth orbit to increase the robustness of navigation, positioning and timing signals.
The future of European satellite navigation

With Galileo serving over five billion users around the world and EGNOS adopted in most European airports, ESA and its partners are hard at work to shape the future of satellite navigation.
Six Galileo First Generation satellites are ready to be launched by Ariane 6, and twelve Second Generation ones are under construction by European industry. ESA and its Member States are also working on adding a layer to Galileo in low Earth orbit, mapping Earth down to the millimetre, capturing an even larger share of the downstream market, bringing optical technology in the equation, navigating the Moon and beyond.
30 years of European satellite navigation

In 2025, European satellite navigation celebrates its 30th anniversary - a milestone built on decades of innovation, collaboration and excellence. Three decades of challenges and triumphs that have shaped the navigation systems we rely on today: EGNOS and Galileo. Three decades that not only define our present but also lay the foundation for the satellite navigation systems of tomorrow.
A galaxy with lots to see

Glittering glimpse of star birth

Copernicus Sentinel-1D ready for transport

Second MTG-Imager undergoes thermal vacuum testing
A robotic real-time strategy game in space

LEO-PNT

The world runs on invisible satellite navigation signals: they fuel our society, generate economic growth and are integral to our security. But they can fade or vanish.
A pivotal step for more robust navigation is expanding to a system including a fleet of satellites in low Earth orbit, operating in a range of signals and frequencies.
ESA’s LEO-PNT demonstrator mission will test the potential of such a system in providing significant augmentation and diversity to Galileo and other existing systems, increasing resilience and enabling new services to places where today’s satnav systems cannot reach.
First glimpse of MetOp-SG-A1 Microwave Sounder data
Coronal mass ejection seen by Metis
Solar Orbiter observed this coronal mass ejection (CME) on 19 November 2022.
A CME is a vast eruption of billions of tonnes of plasma and accompanying magnetic fields from the Sun’s outer atmosphere.
The Metis instrument images the Sun’s outer atmosphere by artificially covering its bright disc, similar to what happens during a total solar eclipse. In this movie, the Sun’s size and position is depicted by the white circle.
This CME was associated with a swell of energetic electrons, also picked up by Solar Orbiter. Read more about how Solar Orbiter traced these superfast electrons back to CMEs on the Sun.
The new research is published today in Astronomy & Astrophysics, as part of a public catalogue of Solar Energetic Electron events observed by Solar Orbiter.
[Image description: The image shows a circular, reddish-brown pattern radiating outward from a dark central circle. The outer ring is filled with streaks and bursts of light, resembling solar rays or an explosion. The center is black with two thin concentric circles, and the bottom of the image displays the date and time 19 Nov 2022, 13:44. The image shows the Sun's outer atmosphere, with a coronal mass ejection bursting from the top right of the Sun.]
Webb observations of interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS

Taking a third look

Webb's view of planet-forming disc IRAS 04302+2247

Harnessing satellite data to assess the state of the ocean | UNOC 2025 seminar

This seminar, presented by Dr. Gemma Kulk and Prof. Shubha Sathyendranath from Plymouth Marine Laboratory (PML) at the 2025 UN Ocean Conference (UNOC), explores how satellite data from ESA’s Climate Change Initiative (CCI) is transforming our understanding of ocean health. Learn how Earth observation and satellite monitoring reveal changes in the world’s oceans and support global ocean science.
Izaña-2 joins the laser game to track space debris

In Tenerife, Spain, stands a unique duo: ESA’s Izaña-1 and Izaña-2 laser-ranging stations. Together, they form an optical technology testbed of the European Space Agency that takes the monitoring of space debris and satellites to a new level while maturing new technologies for commercialisation.
Space debris is a threat to satellites and is rapidly becoming a daily concern for satellite operators. The Space Safety Programme, part of ESA Operations, managed from ESOC in Germany, helps develop new technologies to detect and track debris, and to prevent collisions in orbit in new and innovative ways.
One of these efforts takes place at the Izaña station in Tenerife. There, ESA and partner companies are testing how to deliver precise orbit data on demand with laser-based technologies. The Izaña-2 station was recently finalised by the German company DiGOS and is now in use.
To perform space debris laser ranging, Izaña-2 operates as a laser transmitter, emitting high-power laser pulses towards objects in space. Izaña-1 then acts as the receiver of the few photons that are reflected back. The precision of the laser technology enables highly accurate data for precise orbit determination, which in turn is crucial for actionable collision avoidance systems and sustainable space traffic management.
With the OMLET (Orbital Maintenance via Laser momEntum Transfer) project, ESA combines different development streams and possibilities for automation to support European industry with getting two innovative services market-ready: on-demand ephemeris provision and laser-based collision avoidance services for end users such as satellite operators.
A future goal is to achieve collision avoidance by laser momentum transfer, where instead of the operational satellite, the piece of debris will be moved out of the way. This involves altering the orbit of a piece of space debris slightly by applying a small force to the object through laser illumination.
The European Space Agency actively supports European industry in capitalising on the business opportunities that not only safeguard our satellites but also pave the way for the sustainable use of space.
Time moves fast when you are preparing for liftoff!

This video shows a timelapse of the launch preparations for Europe’s first MetOp Second Generation, MetOp-SG-A1, weather satellite, which hosts the Copernicus Sentinel-5 mission. MetOp-SG-A1 was launched aboard an Ariane 6 rocket from the European spaceport in French Guiana, on 13 August at 02:37 CEST (12 August 21:37 Kourou time).
MetOp-SG-A1 is the first in a series of three successive pairs of satellites. The mission as a whole not only ensures the continued delivery of global observations from polar orbit for weather forecasting and climate analysis for more than 20 years, but also offers enhanced accuracy and resolution compared to the original MetOp mission – along with new measurement capabilities to expand its scientific reach.
This new weather satellite also carries the Copernicus Sentinel-5 mission to deliver daily global data on air pollutants and atmospheric trace gases as well as aerosols and ultraviolet radiation.
Ariane 6 is Europe’s heavy launcher and a key element of ESA’s efforts to ensure autonomous access to space for Europe’s citizens. Ariane 6 has three stages: two or four boosters, and a main and upper stage. For this flight, VA264, the rocket was used in its two-booster configuration.
ESTEC Open Days 2025

The ESTEC Open Days 2025. Registrations open soon. Registration for the Open Day on 11 October opens on 18 August. Registration for the Open Day on 12 October opens on 8 September.
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