Telescope assembly (TA) Ariel infrared spectrometer (AIRS) Fine Guidance System (FGS)
ARIEL mission insignia
Cosmic Vision
← PLATO
EnVision →
The Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey (ARIEL) is a space telescope and the fourth medium-class mission of the European Space Agency's Cosmic Vision programme. The mission is aimed at observing at least 1000 known exoplanets using the transit method, studying and characterising the planets' chemical composition and thermal structures. Compared to the James Webb Space Telescope, ARIEL will be a much smaller telescope and have more observing time available for planet characterisation. ARIEL is expected to be launched in 2029 aboard an Arianespace Ariane 6 together with the Comet Interceptor.
Contents
1Mission
2Spacecraft
2.1Telescope
3Launch and trajectory
4See also
5Notes
6References
7External links
Mission
ARIEL will observe 1000 planets orbiting distant stars and make the first large-scale survey of the chemistry of exoplanet atmospheres.[5] The objective is to answer fundamental questions about how planetary systems form and evolve.[6] A spectrometer will spread the light into a spectrum ("rainbow") and determine the chemical fingerprints of gases in the planets' atmospheres.[6] This will enable scientists to understand how the chemistry of a planet links to the environment in which it forms, and how its formation and evolution are affected by its parent star.[6] ARIEL will study a diverse population of exoplanets in a wide variety of environments, but it will focus on warm and hot planets in orbits close to their star.[6]
The ARIEL mission is being developed by a consortium of various institutions from eleven member states of the European Space Agency (ESA),[lower-alpha 1] and international contributors from four countries.[lower-alpha 2] The project is led by principal investigator Giovanna Tinetti of the University College London,[8][9] who had previously led the unsuccessful Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory (EcHO) proposal for the M3 Cosmic Vision launch slot.[10][11] Operations of the mission and the spacecraft will be handled jointly by ESA and the consortium behind the mission's development, through a coordinated Instrument Operations and Science Data Centre (IOSDC).[7] A Mission Operations Centre (MOC) will be set up at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany, while a concurrent ARIEL Science Operations Centre (SOC) will be set up at the European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC) near Madrid, Spain.[7] The MOC will be responsible for the spacecraft itself, while the SOC will be responsible for archiving mission data and scientific data downlinked from the spacecraft. The IOSDC will help develop results from the mission based on data received by the SOC.[7]
In August 2017, NASA conditionally selected Contribution to ARIEL Spectroscopy of Exoplanets (CASE) as a Partner Mission of Opportunity, pending the result of ESA's Cosmic Vision selection.[12] Under the proposal NASA provides two fine guidance sensors for the ARIEL spacecraft in return for the participation of U.S. scientists in the mission.[13]CASE was officially selected in November 2019, with JPL astrophysicist Mark Swain as principal investigator.[14]
On December 7, 2021, ESA announced that the €200 million contract to build ARIEL had been awarded to Airbus Defence and Space.[15]
On December 6, 2023, ESA approved the construction of ARIEL with a targeted launch date of 2029. [16]
Spacecraft
The design of the ARIEL spacecraft is based on that intended for the Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory (EChO) mission, and has heritage from the thermal design of Planck.[7][17] The body of the spacecraft is split into two distinct modules known as the Service Module (SVM) and the Payload Module (PLM). The SVM is shaped as a 'sandwich' structure, consisting of three aluminium V-Grooves and three pairs of low conductivity fibreglass bipod struts supporting the PLM.[17] A basic horizontal telescope configuration is used for the PLM itself, housing all of the spacecraft's scientific instruments and its oval 1.1 m × 0.7 m (3 ft 7 in × 2 ft 4 in) primary mirror.[17][18] At launch, the spacecraft will have a fuelled mass of 1,300 kg (2,900 lb), and will have a dry mass of 1,000 kg (2,200 lb).[18] The PLM will account for around 300 kg (660 lb) of that mass.[18]
Telescope
The ARIEL telescope's assembly is an off-axis Cassegrain telescope followed by a third parabolic mirror to recollimate the beam. The telescope uses an oval 1.1 m × 0.7 m (3 ft 7 in × 2 ft 4 in) primary mirror; the imaging quality of the system is limited by diffraction for wavelengths longer than about 3 µm, and its focal ratio (f) is 13.4.[19] The system will acquire images in the visible and near-infrared spectrum.[19] To operate its infrared spectroscope between 1.95 µm and 7.8 µm, the telescope will be passively cooled to a temperature of 55 K (−218.2 °C; −360.7 °F).[7][19]
Launch and trajectory
The ARIEL spacecraft is expected to be launched in 2029 by Arianespace's Ariane 62 launch vehicle (currently in development[20][21]) together with the Comet Interceptor.[15][3][22][23] It will be launched from the Centre Spatial Guyanais (CSG) in Kourou, French Guiana,[22][23] from the "Ensemble de lancement Ariane" ELA-4 (Ariane Launch Area-4) being purpose-built for future Ariane 6 launches.[24] ARIEL will be launched to the L2 Lagrange point, in a position located at a distance of 1,500,000 km (930,000 mi) from Earth,[22] where it will encounter a very stable thermal environment that is required to detect exoplanets.[23]
See also
CHEOPS and PLATO – Cosmic Vision exoplanetology missions
Fast Infrared Exoplanet Spectroscopy Survey Explorer (FINESSE) – was a mission proposal (cancelled) to NASA equivalent to ARIEL
Comet Interceptor – launching on the same launch vehicle
List of space telescopes
Notes
↑These are the University of Vienna from Austria, the Universities of Leuven and Liège from Belgium, the Technical University of Denmark, the CEA, CNES, Paris Institute of Astrophysics, Marseille, Côte d'Azur, and Paris Observatories in France , the Max Planck Society and University of Hamburg in Germany , SRON and the Universities of Amsterdam, Delft, and Leiden in the Netherlands, the Space Research Centre of Polish Academy of Sciences, the CAB, Institute of Space Sciences and the Institute of Astrophysics of the Canary Islands in Spain , University of Bern in Switzerland , and the ATC and the Universities of Cardiff, Exeter, Hertfordshire, Keele, Leicester, London, and Oxford in the United Kingdom .[7]
↑These are the Université de Montréal and the University of Toronto in Canada , the ELSI, Tokyo Institute of Technology, and Osaka University in Japan , the National Autonomous University of Mexico, and Caltech, the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory (LPL) and Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Lunar and Planetary Institute, and Universities of Arizona State, Chicago, and Princeton in the United States .[7]
References
↑"ARIEL Summary". ESA. 11 November 2020. https://sci.esa.int/web/ariel/-/59798-summary.
↑"ARIEL Spacecraft". ESA. 11 November 2020. https://sci.esa.int/web/ariel/-/59800-spacecraft.
↑ 3.03.1"Ariel moves from blueprint to reality". ESA. 12 November 2020. https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Ariel_moves_from_blueprint_to_reality.
↑"Ariel Space Mission – European Space Agency M4 Mission" (in en-US). https://arielmission.space/.
↑"A Candidate for the ESA M4 Mission". Ariel Space Mission. 21 April 2019. https://ariel-spacemission.eu/press-releases/.
↑ 6.06.16.26.3"ARIEL exoplanet mission selected as ESA's next medium-class science mission". Ariel Space Mission. 20 March 2018. https://arielspacemission.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/ariel-selection-press-release-uk_2018_final_updated.pdf.
↑Amos, Jonathan (20 March 2018). "Discovering the nature of planets". BBC News. https://www.bbc.com/news/av/science-environment-43477355/discovering-the-nature-of-planets.
↑Gibney, Elizabeth (20 March 2018). "First space mission dedicated to exoplanet atmospheres gets green light". Nature555 (7698): 571. doi:10.1038/d41586-018-03445-5. Bibcode: 2018Natur.555..571G.
↑Gewin, Virginia (14 April 2011). "Turning point: Giovanna Tinetti". Nature472 (7342): 251. doi:10.1038/nj7342-251a. ISSN 1476-4687.
↑European Space Agency (21 February 2014). "ESA selects planet-hunting PLATO mission". Astronomy (magazine). http://www.astronomy.com/news/2014/02/esa-selects-planet-hunting-plato-mission.
↑"NASA Selects Proposals to Study Galaxies, Stars, Planets". Jet Propulsion Laboratory. NASA. https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6918.This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
↑"FINESSE and ARIEL + CASE: Dedicated Transit Spectroscopy Missions for the Post-TESS Era". Cosmic Origins Program Analysis Group (COPAG). NASA. https://cor.gsfc.nasa.gov/copag/AAS_Jan2018/bean_finesse_case.pdf.This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
↑Landau, Elizabeth (8 November 2019). "NASA Instrument to Probe Planet Clouds on European Mission". NASA. https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-instrument-to-probe-planet-clouds-on-european-mission.This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
↑ 15.015.1"ESA award €200m contract to Airbus to build Ariel observatory". European Spaceflight. 7 December 2021. https://europeanspaceflight.com/esa-award-e200m-contract-to-airbus-to-build-ariel-observatory/.
↑"ESA's Ariel Mission is Approved to Begin Construction". 6 December 2023. https://www.universetoday.com/164655/esas-ariel-mission-is-approved-to-begin-construction/.
↑ 17.017.117.2"ARIEL: Spacecraft". European Space Agency. 20 March 2018. http://sci.esa.int/ariel/59800-spacecraft/.
↑ 18.018.118.2"Facts & Figures". ARIEL Space Mission. May 2017. https://ariel-spacemission.eu/ariel-media/.
↑ 19.019.119.2ARIEL - Payload ESA, 20 March 2018
↑Amos, Jonathan (22 June 2017). "Full thrust on Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket". BBC News. https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-40366736.
↑Pultarova, Tereza (25 October 2017). "ArianeGroup CFO Pierre Godart on Ariane 6 cost savings, micro launchers and reusability". SpaceNews. http://spacenews.com/arianegroup-cfo-pierre-godart-on-ariane-6-cost-savings-micro-launchers-and-reusability/.
↑ 22.022.122.2"ESA's next science mission to focus on nature of exoplanets". European Space Agency. 20 March 2018. http://sci.esa.int/cosmic-vision/59796-esa-s-next-science-mission-to-focus-on-nature-of-exoplanets/.
↑ 23.023.123.2Warren, Melissa (20 March 2018). "UK part of ARIEL exoplanet project selected as ESA's next medium-class science mission". Science and Technology Facilities Council. https://www.stfc.ac.uk/news/uk-part-of-ariel-exoplanet-project/.
↑"Race to build Ariane 6 rocket launch pad". Euronews. 14 December 2017. http://www.euronews.com/2017/12/14/race-to-build-ariane-6-rocket-launch-pad.
External links
ARIEL official website
ARIEL at the European Space Agency
v
t
e
European Space Agency
Spaceports
Guiana Space Centre
Esrange
Launch vehicles
Ariane 5
Ariane 6
Arianespace Soyuz
Vega
Facilities
Space Operations Centre
Space Research and Technology Centre
ESA Centre for Earth Observation
European Astronaut Centre
Space Astronomy Centre
Space Applications and Telecommunications Centre
Concurrent Design Facility
Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility
Communications
ESTRACK
European Data Relay System
Programmes
Aurora
ATV
Copernicus
Sentinel
Columbus
CryoSat
EGNOS
GALILEO
ELIPS
ExoMars
FLPP
Living Planet Programme
Orion
Space Situational Awareness Programme
Science Programme
Horizon 2000
Cosmic Vision
Pride
Predecessors
European Launcher Development Organisation
European Space Research Organisation
Related topics
Arianespace
ESA Television
EUMETSAT
European Space Camp
GEWEX
Planetary Science Archive
Projects and missions
Science
Solar physics
ISEE-2 (1977–87)
Ulysses (1990–2009)
SOHO (1995–present)
Cluster II (2000–present)
Solar Orbiter(2020)
Lagrange(2020s)
Planetary science
Giotto (1985–92)
Huygens (1997–2005)
SMART-1 (2003–06)
Mars Express (2003–present)
Rosetta/Philae (2004–16)
Venus Express (2005–14)
ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (2016–present)
BepiColombo (2018–present)
Rosalind Franklin rover (2020)
Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer(2022)
Comet Interceptor(2028)
Astronomy and cosmology
Cos-B (1975–82)
IUE (1978–96)
EXOSAT (1983–86)
Hipparcos (1989–93)
Hubble (1990–present)
Eureca (1992–93)
ISO (1995–98)
XMM-Newton (1999–present)
INTEGRAL (2002–present)
CoRoT (2006–13)
Planck (2009–13)
Herschel (2009–13)
Gaia (2013–present)
CHEOPS(2019)
James Webb(2021)
Euclid(2022)
PLATO(2026)
ARIEL(2028)
ATHENA(2031)
LISA(2034)
Earth observation
Copernicus (1988–)
Meteosat First Generation (1977–97)
ERS-1 (1991–2000)
ERS-2 (1995–2011)
Meteosat Second Generation (2002–present)
Envisat (2002–12)
Double Star (2003–07)
MetOp (2006–present)
GOCE (2009–13)
SMOS (2009–present)
CryoSat-2 (2010–present)
Swarm (2013–present)
Sentinel-1 / 1A / 1B (2014–present)
Sentinel-2 / 2A / 2B (2015–present)
Sentinel-3 / 3A / 3B (2016–present)
Sentinel-5 Precursor (2017–present)
ADM-Aeolus (2018–present)
Biomass(2022)
EarthCARE(2022)
MetOp-SG-A(2022)
FLEX(2023)
Meteosat Third Generation (Sentinel-4) (2023)
MetOp-SG-B(2023)
SMILE(2023)
FORUM(2026)
ISS spaceflight
ISS contribution (1998–present)
Columbus (2008–present)
Jules Verne (2008)
Cupola (2010–present)
Johannes Kepler (2011)
Edoardo Amaldi (2012)
Albert Einstein (2013)
Georges Lemaître (2014)
European Robotic Arm(2020)
Telecommunications
GEOS 2 (1978)
Olympus-1 (1989–93)
Artemis (2001–present)
GIOVE-A (2005–present)
GIOVE-B (2008–present)
HYLAS-1 (2010–present)
Galileo IOV (2011–present)
Galileo FOC (2014–present)
EGNOS
European Data Relay System (2016–present)
Technology demonstrators
ARD (1998)
PROBA-1 (2001–present)
YES2 (2007)
PROBA-2 (2009–present)
PROBA-V (2013–present)
IXV (2015)
LISA Pathfinder (2015–17)
OPS-SAT(2019)
PROBA-3(2021)
AIDA(2023)
Cancelled and proposed
ALTIUS
Ariane 5 ME
Columbus Man-Tended Free Flyer
CSTS
Darwin Mission
Don Quijote
e.Deorbit
EChO
Eddington
EnVision
EXPERT
Hermes
Hopper
LOFT
Luna 27
Lunar Lander
Marco Polo
MarcoPolo-R
Mars sample return mission
ODINUS
SPICA
STE-QUEST
THESEUS
THOR
XIPE
Failed
Cluster
CryoSat-1
GEOS 1
Schiaparelli EDM
Future missions in italics
Category
Commons
Wikinews
WikiProject
v
t
e
Exoplanet search projects
Exoplanetology
Exoplanet
Ground-based
AAPS
APF
CORALIE
EAPSNet
ELODIE
EPICS
ESPRESSO
FINDS Exo-Earths
Geneva
HARPS
HARPS-N
GPI
HATNet
HEK
HiCIAO
HIRES
KELT
LCES
Magellan
MARVELS
MASCARA
MEarth
MicroFUN
MINERVA
Australis
MOA
N2K
NGTS
NESSI
OGLE
OPSP
PlanetPol
Project 1640
PARAS
SEEDS
SETI
SOPHIE
SPECULOOS
SPHERE
SuperWASP
Systemic
TrES
XO Telescope
ZIMPOL/CHEOPS
Space missions
Past
MOST (2003–2019)
SWEEPS using HST(2006)
CoRoT (2006–2013)
EPOXI using Deep Impact(2008–2013)
Kepler (2009–2018)
detected exoplanets
Current
Gaia(2013–present)
ASTERIA (2017–present)
TESS (2018–present)
Planned
CHEOPS (2019)
James Webb Space Telescope (2021)
PLATO(2026)
ARIEL (2028)
WFIRST (mid-2020s)
Proposed
ATLAST
EXCEDE
HabEx
HDST
LUVOIR
Nautilus Deep Space Observatory
New Worlds Mission
OST
PEGASE
Cancelled
Darwin
EChO
Eddington
Space Interferometry Mission
Terrestrial Planet Finder
Detection methods
Discoveries of exoplanets
Lists of exoplanets
nearest
v
t
e
Explorers Program
List of Explorers Program missions
Missions
1958–1992
Explorer 1
2†
3
4
5†
S-1†
6 (S-2)
7 (S-1A)
S-46A†
8
S-56†
9 (S-56A)
S-45†
10
11 (S-15)
S-45A†
S-55†
12 (EPE-A)
13 (S-55A)
14 (EPE-B)
15 (EPE-C)
16 (S-55B)
17 (AE-A)
18 (IMP-A)
19 (AD-A)
S-66A (BE-A)†
20 (IE-A)
21 (IMP-B)
22 (BE-B)
23 (S-55C)
24 (AD-B)
25 (Injun 4, IE-B)
26 (EPE-D)
27 (BE-C)
28 (IMP-C)
29 (GEOS-A)
30 (Solrad 8)
31 (DME-A)
32 (AE-B)
33 (IMP-D)
34 (IMP-F)
35 (IMP-E)
36 (GEOS-B)
37 (Solrad 9)
38 (RAE-A)
39 (AD-C)
40 (Injun 5)
41 (IMP-G)
42 (Uhuru, SAS-A)
43 (IMP-H)
44 (Solrad 10)
45 (SSS-A)
46 (MTS)
47 (IMP-I)
48 (SAS-B)
49 (RAE-B)
50 (IMP-J)
51 (AE-C)
52 (Hawkeye 1)
53 (SAS-C)
54 (AE-D)
55 (AE-E)
DADE-A†
DADE-B†
56 (ISEE-1)
57 (IUE)
58 (HCMM)
59 (ICE)
60 (SAGE)
61 (Magsat)
62 (DE-1)
63 (DE-2)
64 (SME)
65 (CCE)
66 (COBE)
67 (EUVE)
MIDEX
69 (RXTE)
71 (ACE)
77 (FUSE)
78 (IMAGE)
80 (WMAP)
FAME
84 (Swift)
85–89 (THEMIS)
92 (WISE)
95 (TESS)
96 (ICON)
SPHEREx
SMEX
68 (SAMPEX)
70 (FAST)
73 (TRACE)
74 (SWAS)
75 (WIRE)†
81 (RHESSI)
83 (GALEX)
90 (AIM)
91 (IBEX)
93 (NuSTAR)
94 (IRIS)
GEMS
IXPE
PUNCH
TRACERS
UNEX/MO/I
HETE-1†
72 (SNOE)
76 (TERRIERS)†
79 (HETE-2)
INTEGRAL
82 (CHIPSat)
CINDI
Suzaku
TWINS
Hitomi†
NICER
GOLD
XRISM
GUSTO
CASE
Proposals
Proposals
FINESSE
Arcus
OHMIC
ASTRE
EXCEDE
Green titles indicates active current missions
Grey titles indicates cancelled missions
Italics indicate missions yet to launch
Symbol † indicates failure en route or before intended mission data returned
v
t
e
Space observatories
Operating
AGILE (since 2007)
AMS-02 (since 2011)
Aoi (since 2018)
ASTERIA (since 2017)
Astrosat (since 2015)
BRITE constellation (since 2013)
CALET (since 2015)
Chandra (AXAF) (since 1999)
DAMPE (since 2015)
Fermi (since 2008)
Gaia(since 2013)
HXMT (Insight) (since 2017)
Hinode (Solar-B) (since 2006)
HiRISE (since 2005)
Hisaki (SPRINT-A) (since 2013)
Hubble (since 1990)
INTEGRAL (since 2002)
IBEX (since 2008)
IRIS (since 2013)
ISS-CREAM (since 2017)
MAXI (since 2009)
Mikhailo Lomonosov (since 2016)
Mini-EUSO (since 2019)
NCLE (since 2018)
NEOSSat (since 2013)
NICER (since 2017)
NuSTAR (since 2012)
Odin (since 2001)
SDO (since 2010)
SOHO (since 1995)
SOLAR (since 2008)
Spektr-RG (since 2019)
Spitzer (since 2003)
STEREO (since 2006)
Swift (since 2004)
TESS (since 2018)
WISE (since 2009)
XMM-Newton (since 1999)
Planned
CHEOPS (2019)
iWF-MAXI (2019)
Astro-1 Telescope (2020)
ILO-1 (2020)
LUCI (2020)
Nano-JASMINE (2020)
ORBIS (2020)
Solar Orbiter (SolO) (2020)
IXPE (2021)
James Webb (JWST) (2021)
LORD (2021)
SVOM (2021)
XPoSat (2021)
Euclid(2022)
Space Solar Telescope (2022)
XRISM (2022)
Xuntian (2022)
K-EUSO (2023)
Solar-C (2023)
SPHEREx (2023)
Small-JASMINE (2024)
Near-Earth Object Surveillance Mission (2025+)
Spektr-UV (2025)
WFIRST (2025+)
PLATO (2026)
LiteBIRD (2027)
ARIEL (2028)
Spektr-M (2030+)
ATHENA (2031)
LISA (2034)
Proposed
Arcus
AstroSat-2
EXCEDE
Fresnel Imager
FOCAL
HabEx
Hibari
Hypertelescope
JEM-EUSO
LUVOIR
ATLAST
HDST
Lynx
Nautilus Deep Space Observatory
New Worlds Mission
NRO donation to NASA
OST
PhoENiX
Solar-D
SPICA
THEIA
THESEUS
Retired
Akari (Astro-F) (2006–2011)
ALEXIS (1993–2005)
Alouette 1 (1962–1972)
Ariel 1 (1962, 1964)
Ariel 2 (1964)
Ariel 3 (1967–1969)
Ariel 4 (1971–1972)
Ariel 5 (1974–1980)
Ariel 6 (1979–1982)
ATM (1973–1974)
ASCA (Astro-D) (1993–2000)
Astro-1 (1990)
BBXRT
HUT
Astro-2 (HUT) (1995)
Astron(1983–1989)
ANS (1974–1976)
BeppoSAX (1996–2003)
CHIPSat (2003–2008)
Compton (CGRO) (1991–2000)
CoRoT (2006–2013)
Cos-B (1975–1982)
COBE (1989–1993)
DXS (1993)
EPOCh (2008)
EPOXI (2010)
Explorer 11 (1961)
EXOSAT (1983–1986)
EUVE (1992–2001)
FUSE (1999–2007)
Kvant-1 (1987–2001)
GALEX (2003–2013)
Gamma (1990–1992)
Ginga (Astro-C) (1987–1991)
Granat (1989–1998)
Hakucho (CORSA-b) (1979–1985)
HALCA (MUSES-B) (1997–2005)
HEAO-1 (1977–1979)
Herschel (2009–2013)
Hinotori (Astro-A) (1981–1991)
HEAO-2 (Einstein Obs.) (1978–1982)
HEAO-3 (1979–1981)
HETE-2 (2000–2008)
Hipparcos (1989–1993)
IUE (1978–1996)
IRAS (1983)
IRTS (1995–1996)
ISO (1996–1998)
IXAE (1996–2004)
Kepler (2009–2018)
Kristall (1990–2001)
LEGRI (1997–2002)
LISA Pathfinder (2015–2017)
MOST (2003–2019)
MSX (1996–1997)
OAO-2 (1968–1973)
OAO-3 (Copernicus) (1972–1981)
Orbiting Solar Observatory
OSO 1
OSO 2/OSO B
OSO 3
OSO 4
OSO 5
OSO 6
OSO 7
OSO 8
Orion 1 (1971)
Orion 2 (1973)
PAMELA (2006–2016)
PicSat (2018)
Planck (2009–2013)
RELIKT-1 (1983–1984)
R/HESSI (2002–2018)
ROSAT (1990–1999)
RXTE (1995–2012)
SAMPEX (1992–2004)
SAS-B (1972–1973)
SAS-C (1975–1979)
Solwind (1979–1985)
Spektr-R (2011–2019)
Suzaku (Astro-EII) (2005–2015)
Taiyo (SRATS) (1975–1980)
Tenma (Astro-B) (1983–1985)
Uhuru (1970–1973)
Vanguard 3 (1959)
WMAP (2001–2010)
Yokoh (Solar-A) (1991–2001)
Hibernating (Mission completed)
SWAS (1998–2005)
TRACE (1998–2010)
Lost
OAO-1 (1966)
OAO-B (1970)
CORSA (1976)
OSO C (1965)
ABRIXAS (1999)
HETE-1 (1996)
WIRE (1999)
Astro-E (2000)
Tsubame (2014–2015)
Hitomi (Astro-H) (2016)
Cancelled
AOSO
Astro-G
Constellation-X
Darwin
Destiny
EChO
Eddington
FAME
FINESSE
GEMS
HOP
IXO
JDEM
LOFT
OSO J
OSO K
Sentinel
SIM & SIMlite
SNAP
SPOrt
TAUVEX
TPF
XEUS
XIPE
See also
Great Observatories program
List of space telescopes
List of proposed space observatories
List of X-ray space telescopes
Category
v
t
e
Future spaceflights
Crewed
2020
Soyuz MS-16 (April)
Soyuz MS-17 (October)
Shenzhou 12
Crew Dragon Demo-2
Boeing Crewed Flight Test
USCV-1
USCV-2
New Shepard (crewed flight test)
VSS Unity VF02
2021
Gaganyaan Crewed Flight 1
Shenzhou 13
USCV-3
2022
Artemis 2
2023+
#dearMoon project (2023)
Artemis 3 (2024)
Robotic
2020
AFSPC-7
ALOS-3
ALOS-4
Artemis 1 (November)
Orion
Lunar Flashlight
NEA Scout
BioSentinel
SkyFire
Lunar IceCube
CuSP
LunaH-Map
EQUULEUS
OMOTENASHI
ArgoMoon
Cislunar Explorers
CU-E3
Team Miles
Chandrayaan-3
Chang'e 5
GSAT-20
Hope Mars Mission (July)
HX-1 (July–August)
Ingenio
Inmarsat-6 F1
JCSAT-17
Kounotori 9 (May)
Mars 2020 (July–August)
MX-1E (July)
Nauka / European Robotic Arm (December)
QZS-1R
RAPIS-2 / Z-Sat / DRUMS / KOSEN-1
Rosalind Franklin rover and Kazachok lander (July)
Solar Orbiter (February)
Space Complex Alpha
TARANIS
2021
Aditya-L1
Astrobotic M1 (June)
AEM rovers
Uni
EXA/AEC lunar orbiter
B330
CAPSTONE (December)
DART / LICIA (June)
Dream Chaser (September)
Hakuto-R M1 (October)
IXPE (April)
James Webb Space Telescope (March)
Landsat 9 (January)
Lucy (October)
Luna 25 (July)
Nova-C (July)
PROBA-3 (Q2)
PTScientists
Tianhe
SES-17
Space RIDER
UN/Dream Chaser
Wentian
XPoSat
2022
Biomass (October)
DESTINY+
EarthCARE (June)
Euclid (June)
HTV-X1
JUICE (June)
KPLO (July)
MetOp-SG Series A
NISAR (September)
Power and Propulsion Element (December)
Prichal
Psyche (August)
PUNCH / TRACERS
Soyuz GVK-1
SpaceX Starship (1st Mars departure)
TEREX-1
Weather System Follow-on Microwave
XRISM / SLIM (January)
2023
Chang'e 7
Hakuto-R M2 (March)
MetOp-SG Series B
QZS-5
QZS-6
QZS-7
Shukrayaan-1
SMILE
SPHEREx
2024+
Chang'e 6 (2023 or 2024)
FLEX
GOES-U (2024)
Hera / APEX / Juventas (October 2024)
IMAP / SWFO-L1 (October 2024)
Luna 26 (2024)
MMX (September 2024)
MOM 2 (2024)
Small-JASMINE (2024)
ZhengHe (2024)
Europa Clipper (2025)
Luna 27 (2025)
Luna 28 (2025+)
Spektr-UV (2025)
Dragonfly (2026)
PLATO (2026)
Venera-D (2026 or 2031)
Chang'e 8 (2027)
LiteBIRD (2027)
ARIEL / Comet Interceptor]] (2028)
ATHENA (2031)
LISA (2034)
TBA
Energia-100
Europa Lander (2025?)
KiwiSAT
Lybid 1
Nano-JASMINE
Near-Earth Object Surveillance Mission
WFIRST (mid-2020s)
Recently launched
Progress MS-13 (6 December)
Jilin-1 Gaofen-02B (7 December)
HEAD-2A / 2B (7 December)
GLONASS-M List of GLONASS satellites
List of proposed missions to the Moon
List of proposed space observatories
0.00
(0 votes)
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARIEL. Read more