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ESA Top Multimedia

ESA Top Multimedia

Ethiopian volcanic plume

The Hayli Gubbi volcano in northeast Ethiopia, dormant for up to 12 000 years, erupted on 23 November 2025, sending a large plume of ash and sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere. Copernicus Sentinel-5P captured the spread of the sulphur dioxide.

Good to go – Let's Smile (episode 4)

Smile is a brand-new space mission currently in the making. It will study how Earth responds to the solar wind and solar storms.

At the European Space Agency’s technical heart in the Netherlands, engineers have taken Smile through the final steps of testing and past its qualification and flight acceptance review – confirming that it is ready for launch in spring 2026.

This video let’s viewers peek into the testing and review process. It is the fourth episode in a series of short videos, and includes interviews with David Agnolon (ESA Smile Project Manager), Xia Jiayi (CAS Thermal Engineer), Ana Carillo Pérez (Airbus AIT Electrical and Functional Lead Engineer), Adriana González Castro (ESA Smile Project Controller), Li Jing (CAS Smile Project Manager) and Carole Mundell (ESA Director of Science).

Smile (the Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link Explorer) is a joint mission between the European Space Agency and the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Smile is due to launch on a European Vega-C rocket in spring 2026. Follow the latest mission news via esa.int/smile.

Access the related broadcast quality video material 

Access the other episodes of ‘Let’s Smile’

Testing, testing, testing – Let’s Smile (episode 3)

Completing the spacecraft – Let’s Smile (episode 2)

Introducing the Smile mission – Let’s Smile (episode 1)

Smile’s other half arrives – Let’s Smile (action snippet)

Flying for the Moon

Flying for the Moon

Solar fireworks caught on camera

Solar fireworks caught on camera

Finding star clusters in the Lost Galaxy

Finding star clusters in the Lost Galaxy

Earth from Space: The Danakil Depression

The Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission takes us over one of Earth’s most extreme environments: the Danakil Depression in Ethiopia.

The epic adventures of BepiColombo - Part 2: It’s a long way to Mercury

Bepi, Mio and MTM’s adventures continue! What have they achieved on their extraordinary journey to Mercury, planet of extremes and mysteries?

They haven’t been bored, that’s for sure. They snapped cool photos and collected real science data as they flew past Earth, Venus and Mercury – each planet is unique! After witnessing Venus’s blinding heat, flying through Mercury’s freezing shadow, and braving strong winds and radiation coming from the Sun, the trio know they are ready for anything.

In November 2026, the spacecraft will arrive at Mercury to stay. Bepi and Mio will orbit around the little planet to uncover all its mysteries, like: What is it made of? Does it have water? And how does its magnetic field work?

Meet the cartoon characters during their mission training

Marking one year until BepiColombo reaches Mercury

BepiColombo is a joint mission between ESA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), executed under ESA leadership. It is Europe's first mission to Mercury. Launched in 2018, it will arrive at Mercury in November 2026 and begin science operations in early 2027.

ESA’s Argonaut press conference

The press conference, at the European Astronaut Centre in Cologne, Germany, follows the signing of contracts between Thales Alenia Space Italy, UK and France, OHB system AG (Germany) and Nammo (UK) for the ESA’s lunar lander programme Argonaut.

The programme is a key part of ESA’s lunar strategy and will support future robotic and crewed missions, contributing to international efforts to establish a long-term human presence on the Moon.

SOHO observes comet 3I/ATLAS

SOHO observes comet 3I/ATLAS

Wolf-Rayet Apep (MIRI Image)

Wolf-Rayet Apep (MIRI Image)

Galileo ‘fit check’ and functional tests

Galileo ‘fit check’ and functional tests

Galileo, advancing toward the future

Since becoming operational in 2016, Galileo has continued to evolve, introducing new capabilities and services to meet the needs of its over five billion users.

This December, two new Galileo satellites will launch aboard Ariane 6 - a major step for Europe’s autonomy and resilience in space.

And the journey doesn’t stop there: twelve Galileo Second Generation satellites are under construction, set to deliver even faster, more reliable positioning, navigation, and timing for everyone, everywhere.

Phoebus animation

Phoebus is a European Space Agency (ESA) project together with ArianeGroup and MT Aerospace. It aims to assess the feasibility and benefits of replacing the metallic tanks on ESA’s Ariane 6 upper stage with carbon-fibre reinforced-plastic tanks. While this lightweight material offers the possibility of saving several tonnes of mass, such an approach has never been implemented before and presents significant technical challenges.

The central core of ESA’s Ariane 6 rocket runs on liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen, two very different molecules, so the Phoebus project is developing and producing two versions of the same carbon fibre tank concept. 

Phoebus has already proved it is possible: small 60-l demonstration ‘bottle’ tanks have shown that carbon-fibre reinforced-plastic can hold hydrogen in liquid form – without leaking.

The Phoebus team has found the right reinforcing plastic resin to resist both corrosion and the cold temperatures and figured out how to lay the carbon fibre so that they can bear the extreme conditions without cracking.

Phoebus 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.

Webb: CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 in MACS J1149.5+2223

Webb: CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 in MACS J1149.5+2223

A disruptive neighbour

A disruptive neighbour

Revisiting an unusual spiral

Revisiting an unusual spiral

ESA Director General looks ahead to CM25

On 26 and 27 November, the ESA Ministerial Council will take place in Bremen, Germany. Key decisions will be made about the activities of the European Space Agency in the coming years in the frame of ESA’s Strategy 2040. ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher explains why this is an important moment and the challenges and opportunities for the European space sector.

Up goes Lunar Link

One antenna of ESA's Lunar Link being tested in a cleanroom at Thales Alenia Space in Cannes, France

Carbon Amazon Rainforest Activity

For decades, the Amazon rainforest has quietly absorbed vast quantities of human-generated carbon dioxide, helping to slow the pace of climate change. Recent evidence, however, suggests that this vital natural buffer may be weakening – though uncertainties remain. To help close this critical knowledge gap, European and Brazilian researchers have gathered deep in the Amazon to carry out an ambitious European Space Agency-funded Carbon Amazon Rainforest Activity field campaign.
Read full story: ESA investigates high-stakes Amazon tipping point

Sentinel-6B launch coverage

Copernicus Sentinel-6B was launched on 17 November 2025, ready to continue a decades-long mission to track the height of the planet’s seas – a key measure of climate change. The satellite was carried into orbit on a Falcon 9 rocket from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, US.

Sentinel-6B follows in the footsteps of its predecessor, Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, which was launched in 2020. The mission is the reference radar altimetry mission that continues the vital record of sea-surface height measurements until at least 2030.

Copernicus Sentinel-6 has become the gold standard reference mission to monitor and record sea-level rise. The mission’s main instrument is the Poseidon-4 dual-frequency (C-band and Ku-band) radar altimeter. Developed by ESA, the altimeter measures sea-surface height. It also captures the height of ‘significant’ waves as well as wind speed to support operational oceanography.

Sentinel-6B lifts off to continue sea-level record

Sentinel-6B lifts off to continue sea-level record

A solar prominence hovers over the Sun

The Sun is always mesmerising to watch, but Solar Orbiter captured a special treat on camera: a dark ‘prominence’ sticking out from the side of the Sun.   

The dark-looking material is dense plasma (charged gas) trapped by the Sun's complex magnetic field. It looks dark because it is cooler than its surroundings, being around 10 000 °C compared to the surrounding million-degree plasma.  

When viewed against the background of space, the hovering plasma is referred to as a prominence. When viewed against the Sun's surface, it is called a filament. (In this image you can see examples of both.) 

Solar prominences and filaments extend for tens of thousands of kilometres, several times the diameter of Earth. They can last days or even months. This video shows one hour of footage, sped up to make movement more clearly visible.  

Solar Orbiter recorded this video with its Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument on 17 March 2025. At the time, the spacecraft was around 63 million km from the Sun, similar to planet Mercury. 

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). 

[Video description: Close-up video of the Sun, filling the left half of the view, its surface covered what looks like moving, glowing hairs accompanied by some short-lived bright arcs. Protruding to the right, in the centre of the video, is dark material that looks almost feathery, with thin streaks flowing both away from and towards the Sun.] 

Earth from Space: Prague

This very high-resolution image captures the beautiful medieval core of the Czech capital, Prague.

Comet Lemmon meets NGC 3184

Comet Lemmon meets NGC 3184

Copernicus Sentinel-6B pre-launch media briefing

Copernicus Sentinel-6B, a sea-level monitoring satellite, is due to be launched no earlier than 17 November. Officials from ESA, the European Commission, EUMETSAT, NASA and marine applications users are set to share the latest information about this exciting mission and to be on-hand to answer questions.

Goal 5: Inspire Europe

ESA has set five goals to achieve by 2040. Goal 5 is to Inspire Europe. 

ESA and its 23 Member States share an ambitious vision for Europe’s future, united by curiosity, driven by excellence and inspired by the endless sky above us. 

Through education, cooperation and world-leading missions, ESA empowers every generation to look up, imagine more and help elevate Europe’s future. 

At the ESA Council at Ministerial Level held on 26 and 27 November 2025, Europe will take the next step in this shared journey as part of Strategy 2040. 

Learn more about ESA’s Strategy 2040 here

Access all Five Goals videos

Goal 4: Boost Growth and Competitiveness

ESA has set five goals to achieve by 2040. Goal 4 is to Boost Growth and Competitiveness. 

By fostering a vibrant educational, technological and industrial space ecosystem across its Member States, ESA strengthens Europe’s innovation base, accelerates commercial opportunity and builds long-term prosperity, boosting competitiveness for today and the generations to come. 

At the ESA Council at Ministerial Level held on 26 and 27 November 2025, ESA and its Member States will take decisive steps to unlock Europe’s full space potential as part of Strategy 2040. 

Learn more about ESA’s Strategy 2040 here

Access all Five Goals videos

Goal 3: Strengthen European Autonomy and Resilience

ESA has set five goals to achieve by 2040. Goal 3 is to Strengthen Autonomy and Resilience. 

By developing advanced communication networks and world-leading European observation and navigation capabilities, ESA ensures Europe can rely on secure, independent and resilient space services, supporting citizens, businesses and governments in an evolving world. 

At the ESA Council at Ministerial Level held on 26 and 27 November 2025, ESA and its Member States will advance key programmes to strengthen Europe’s strategic autonomy as part of Strategy 2040. 

Learn more about ESA’s Strategy 2040 here

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Goal 2: Explore and Discover

ESA has set five goals to achieve by 2040. Goal 2 is to Explore and Discover. 

By pushing the boundaries of human knowledge and exploring the farthest reaches of the cosmos, ESA helps answer humanity’s most fundamental questions, revealing the origins of our Universe, our planet and life itself and inspiring generations across Europe and beyond. 

At the ESA Council at Ministerial Level held on 26 and 27 November 2025, ESA and its Member States will take key decisions to accelerate European space exploration as part of Strategy 2040. 

Learn more about ESA’s Strategy 2040 here

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Goal 1: Protect our Planet and Climate

ESA has set five goals to achieve by 2040. Goal 1 is to Protect our Planet and Climate 
By giving Europe the eyes in the sky to monitor environmental change and understand the threats that profoundly affect our world, ESA helps anticipate and mitigate their impacts, making Europe and our planet more resilient and sustainable for everyone. 

At the ESA Council at Ministerial Level held on 26 and 27 November 2025, ESA and its Member States will take key decisions to accelerate this goal and strengthen Europe’s leadership. 

Learn more about ESA’s Strategy 2040 here

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