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ESA Top Multimedia

ESA Top Multimedia

Globular cluster targets that revealed “forever young” stars

Globular cluster targets that revealed “forever young” stars

X-rays blast from a solar flare

X-rays blast from a solar flare

Legs made for a Mars landing

To land on the right foot on the Red Planet, European engineers have been dropping a skeleton of the four-legged ExoMars descent module at various speeds and heights on simulated martian surfaces.

Watch a quick sequence of some of the drops from different angles. For over a month, Thales Alenia Space and Airbus teams ran dozens of vertical drops using a full-scale model of the landing platform at the ALTEC facilities in Turin, Italy. 

This first series of tests involved dropping the model onto both hard and soft surfaces, the latter filled with powdery, Mars-like soil.  The team changed the speed and height of the falls by a few centimetres. 

During the test campaign, the four legs replicated the structure and dimensions of those that will fly to Mars. The lightweight, deployable legs are interconnected and equipped with shock absorbers to withstand the impact.

Another goal of the campaign was to verify the performance of the touchdown sensors. A system installed in all four legs detects when the spacecraft approaches the surface and triggers the shutdown of the descent engines after a soft landing.  

The landing legs are crucial gear for the safe touchdown of the ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover mission in 2030, alongside parachutes and engines that will slow the spacecraft’s descent onto Mars. 

While Thales Alenia Space is the industrial lead of the mission, Airbus provides the landing platform and ALTEC offers technical support.

Magnetic avalanche in action

Solar Orbiter’s most detailed view yet of a large solar flare, observed during its 30 September 2024 close approach to the Sun. 

The imagery was published in 2025, but now scientists have focused in on the details to uncover an exciting and surprising result: individual solar flares are triggered by initially weak disturbances that quickly become more violent – much like an avalanche on a snowy mountain. This rapidly evolving process creates a ‘sky’ of raining plasma blobs that continue to fall even after the flare subsides.

For the first time, this process is revealed in the video shown here, along with the supplementary videos featured in the full story.

When Solar Orbiter’s Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) first started observing the region at about 23:06 Universal Time (UT), a dark arch-like ‘filament’ of twisted magnetic fields and plasma was already present, connected to a cross-shaped structure of progressively brightening magnetic field lines.

Zooming in to this feature shows that new magnetic field strands are appearing in every image frame – equivalent to every two seconds or less. Each strand is magnetically contained, and they become twisted, like ropes. Then, just like in a typical avalanche, the region becomes unstable. The twisted strands begin to break and reconnect, rapidly triggering a cascade of further destabilisations in the area. This creates progressively stronger reconnection events and outflows of energy, seen as increasing brightness in the imagery.

A sudden brightening begins at 23:29 UT, followed by the dark filament disconnecting from one side, launching into space and at the same time violently unrolling at high speed. The unwinding closest to the footprint is recorded at 250 km/s, increasing to 400 km/s at the site of disconnection. Bright sparks of reconnection are seen all along the filament in stunning high resolution as the flare erupts at 23:47 UT.

At the same time, ribbon-like features are seen moving extremely quickly down through the Sun’s atmosphere. These streams of ‘raining plasma blobs’ are signatures of energy deposition from the reconnection events, which get stronger and stronger as the flare progresses. Even after the flare subsides, the rain continues for some time.

While EUI captured this high-resolution imagery, Solar Orbiter’s SPICE and STIX instruments monitored the temperatures and particle emissions at different layers in the Sun’s atmosphere. They revealed the slow rise of ultraviolet to x-ray emission prior to the flare, followed by a dramatic increase in x-ray emission during the main phase of the flare – signifying that particles were accelerated to 40-50% the speed of light equivalent to about 431–540 million km/h. This was recorded close to the base of the filament connection point as it unfurled into space.

After the main phase of the flare, the original cross-shape of magnetic field lines relaxes and the instruments see the plasma cool down to ‘normal’ levels. Bundles of looped magnetic field lines and suspended plasma – ‘arcades’ – hang over the flare site for some time.

Read more 

Solar Orbiter is a space mission of international collaboration between ESA and NASA. The EUI instrument is led by the Royal Observatory of Belgium (ROB).

Slow-motion drop for ExoMars landing platform

Slow-motion drop for ExoMars landing platform

Smoke plumes from Chile wildfires seen by Sentinel-3

This image, captured by Copernicus Sentinel-3 on 18 January 2026, shows clouds of smoke from wildfires on the coast of Chile.

Coronal Mass Ejection erupts from the Sun on 18 January 2026

Coronal Mass Ejection erupts from the Sun on 18 January 2026

Rocket roll

The Artemis II rocket was rolled out to its launch pad.

Proba-3: our eyes on the Sun’s inner corona

Proba-3: our eyes on the Sun’s inner corona

Sophie Adenot exercising on E4D

Sophie Adenot exercising on E4D

Earth from Space: The fate of a giant

This Copernicus Sentinel-2 image over the South Atlantic Ocean features a close-up view of the A23a iceberg, once the world’s largest. The unusually cloud-free image shows the first signs that the iceberg will soon disintegrate completely.

Plato passes vibe check

Plato, the European Space Agency’s mission to discover Earth-like exoplanets, successfully passed a first round of tests designed to ensure that the spacecraft is fit for launch. As this video shows, the tests consist of vigorously shaking the spacecraft to mimic the powerful jolts and vibrations that Plato will experience during launch.

These so-called ‘vibration tests’, are arranged in three parts. In this clip, we see the phase when the spacecraft, mounted on a ‘quad’ shaker, is jolted up and down (Z axis). In the other two stages, on top a ‘lateral’ shaker, the spacecraft is jiggled back and forth sideways in two perpendicular directions (X and Y axes).

Each test run lasts one minute, during which the frequency of the oscillations is gradually increased from 5 to 100 oscillations per second (hertz). At the higher frequencies we can no longer perceive the movement, but we hear the spacecraft’s internal rumbling caused by the fast shaking. The sound comes in waves, becoming louder when the shaker hits resonance frequencies and makes the spacecraft vibrate more intensely.

The first couple of minutes of a satellite's spaceflight are the toughest, as it sustains the extreme vibration of lift-off. By subjecting the spacecraft with these dramatic stresses in advance of the real launch, engineers ensure that no piece of space hardware will be damaged during launch.

Plato is currently undertaking its tough exams to graduate for launch. After vibration tests, the spacecraft was placed inside ESA’s acoustic test chamber and blasted by deafening sound similar to what it will experience during lift-off. Also this test went as expected.

Next, engineers will move the spacecraft to the Large Space Simulator – Europe’s largest vacuum chamber – to verify that it can withstand the extreme temperatures and emptiness of space.

The mission is expected to be ready for launch by the end of the year. Lift-off on an Ariane 6 is planned in by Ariane Space for January 2027.

About Plato

ESA’s Plato (PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars) will use 26 cameras to study terrestrial exoplanets in orbits up to the habitable zone of Sun-like stars.

Plato's scientific instrumentation, consisting of the cameras and electronic units, is provided through a collaboration between ESA and the Plato Mission Consortium composed of various European research centres, institutes and industries. The spacecraft is being built and assembled by the industrial Plato Core Team led by OHB together with Thales Alenia Space and Beyond Gravity.

Sentinel-2A night imaging campaign

Sentinel-2A night imaging campaign

Wildfires in Patagonia

Wildfires in Patagonia

Circinus Galaxy (Hubble and Webb)

Circinus Galaxy (Hubble and Webb)

ATD water-cooled throttleable engine firing

Romanian company ATD Aerospace RS SRL is developing a 10 kN rocket engine that can be re-ignited and adjust its thrust. This builds on the 1 kN engine they developed with support from the European Space Agency (ESA).

Before working with ESA, ATD had already created several engines in the 0.5–1 kN range, which paved the way for their later developments. This project is part of ESA’s Future Launchers Preparatory Programme (FLPP), that helps develop the technology for future for space transportation systems. By conceiving, designing and investing in technology that doesn’t exist yet, this programme is reducing the risk entailed in developing untried and unproven projects for space.

The firing test seen here shows a water-cooled version as it cycles from 100% thrust to 60% and back to 100%. The test, conducted in Romania in 2025 saw the engine perform as expected. The engine uses hypergolic propellants, which are ideal for spacecraft or rockets that need to store fuel for extended periods.

Turned upside down, the engine could suspend 1000-kg on Earth, the weight of typical hippopotamus. Used as intended it could slow the descent of a rocket stage and ensure a soft touchdown.

Various sensors were used during the test firings to characterise the engine and its functions.

The development involves three designs, starting with an uncooled engine demonstration, a next version that is cooled with water, as seen in this video, and finally a self-contained engine that incorporates its own cooling.

The European Space Agency is financing the development up to the successful test of the final regenerative cooled-engine, reaching a technology readiness level of five with a smaller-scale test firing (TRL5).

Finding the echo

ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot training on EchoFinder‑2.

ESA Director General’s 2026 annual press briefing

Josef Aschbacher, Director General of the European Space Agency, briefed journalists on the main milestones for 2026, such as the launch of Smile, a mission that will give humankind its first complete look at how Earth reacts to streams of particles and bursts of radiation from the Sun. Later in 2026 should also see the arrival of BepiColombo at Mercury after its eight-year trip, where it will gather data to answer many perplexing questions about the least-explored planet of the inner Solar System. Many more exciting missions are expected, with ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot launching for the International Space Station, and various Earth Observation and Navigation launches from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana.

Download the press briefing slides

ESA preview 2026

As a new year begins, let’s take a look at what’s ahead for the European Space Agency in 2026. From Earth to the farthest reaches of the Solar System, 2026 marks a year of firsts that continue to shape the future of space.

Clearing of tropical forest in Peru 1995–2020

Clearing of tropical forest in Peru 1995–2020

Snow-covered Amsterdam

This image, captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission on 6 January 2026, shows Amsterdam in the Netherlands blanketed in snow.

Sextans A PAHs pull-out (NIRCam and MIRI image)

Sextans A PAHs pull-out (NIRCam and MIRI image)

Scientists identify 'Astronomy’s Platypus' with Webb

Scientists identify 'Astronomy’s Platypus' with Webb

Ice velocity on Jakobshavn Glacier in Greenland, 2014–2024

Ice velocity on Jakobshavn Glacier in Greenland, 2014–2024

Press conference with ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot

Media representatives joined French ESA astronaut Sophie Adenot, on Monday 5 January, for a hybrid press conference to learn more about her first mission to space.

This event, held at the European Astronaut Centre (EAC) in Germany, was the final media event in Europe ahead of her launch to the International Space Station.

Sophie selected the name ‘εpsilon’ for her first mission, currently planned no earlier than 15 February, reflecting the power of small, yet impactful contributions, and how many parts come together to make a whole.

During εpsilon, Sophie will conduct a wide range of tasks on the International Space Station, including European-led scientific experiments, medical research, supporting Earth observation and contributing to operations and maintenance on the Station.

Nature’s fireworks from space

As she flew 400 km above Earth at hypersonic speed, NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps caught a gigantic spark with blue and red flashes shooting upwards.  

This video shows a blue jet propagating into space towards the upper layers of the atmosphere. The beam of light is followed by red flashes spreading like tentacles across the sky.  

You can watch the magnificent show at different speeds, but in reality, it lasted less than a second.  

Jeanette directed a high-resolution camera from the International Space Station towards a summer thunderstorm. With the camera set at the fastest frame rate for slow-motion video, she managed to record the giant jet in all its splendour.   

What the astronaut captured from orbit in July 2024 is rarely visible on Earth because it takes place above the clouds, at altitudes between 40 and 80 kilometres. This powerful yet elusive electrical phenomenon is known as a Transient Luminous Event (TLE). 

ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen captured the first pulsating jet from space a decade ago, providing a new perspective on electrical activity at the top of thunderstorms. Scientists began to learn what types of clouds trigger such phenomena and how they impact the chemistry of the atmosphere. 

Her recording is part of the Thor-Davis experiment designed to investigate lightning in the upper atmosphere and how it might affect the concentration of greenhouse gases. The experiment is called Thor after the god of thunder, lightning and storms in Nordic mythology, and is led by the Danish Technical University (DTU) together with ESA. 

Lightning triggers powerful electrical bursts in our atmosphere almost every second, yet the inner workings of these forces of nature are still not fully understood. Capturing such phenomena is vital for scientists researching Earth’s weather systems.  

Fly 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!

Galileo: 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. 

Follow the launch campaign

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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 

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