Hosted by Dailymotion. For legal issues report at the Copyright Center, report us on DMC, or use the Instant Removal tool.
Navigating in space
5 Views • Aug 19, 2015
Description
The Flight Dynamics team delivers precise orbital determinations enabling ground controllers to know where the spacecraft are located and prepare the manoeuvres to reach their targets like the Moon, Mars, Venus, a comet or a spacecraft constellation. The Flight Dynamics team also conducts mission analysis — they brainstorm about how robotic spacecraft can reach and return data from anywhere in the Solar System.
Flight dynamics scientists work as part of the team operating every ESA mission, whether in low-Earth orbit or soaring deep into our Solar System. They provide precise orbital calculations, determining where the spacecraft are located, which direction they're facing, where they're going and how far they've travelled.
This information is vital and is used every day not only by the mission controllers but also by supporting teams such as the Estrack station engineer, who have to know where to point their tracking antennas, what time to start 'listening' for a signal and how long a spacecraft will be visible.
More from User
Earth from Space: Sagaing Division, Myanmar
European Space Agency, ESA
Launching satellites from Space Station – step one
European Space Agency, ESA
Spacewalker’s view
European Space Agency, ESA
Launching satellites from Space Station – step two
European Space Agency, ESA
Introducing ESA’s new astronaut Matthias Maurer
European Space Agency, ESA
Ariane 6
European Space Agency, ESA
Related Videos
Earth from Space: ESA and the UK Space Agency
European Space Agency, ESA
Space for knowledge, competitiveness & growth - Space day conference Farnborough 2012 - 10th July
European Space Agency, ESA
Working in space: ‘Of bees and lunar landers’ – biomimetics and space
European Space Agency, ESA
Earth from Space: Big data from space
European Space Agency, ESA
Working in space: Time and space - research on gravitation spurs innovation
European Space Agency, ESA
Do objects have weight in space? - Take your classroom into space
European Space Agency, ESA