Europe's new
Ariane 6 rocket powers into space
Europe's new heavy-lift rocket,
Ariane 6, made its inaugural flight from Europe's
Spaceport in French Guiana at 16:00 local time on 9
July (+4 20:00 time BST, +5 21:00 time CEST)
Ariane 6 is the latest in Europe's Ariane
rocket series, taking over from Ariane 5, and
featuring a modular and versatile design that can
launch missions from low-Earth orbit and farther out
into deep space.
"A completely new rocket is not launched
often, and success is far from guaranteed. I am
privileged to have witnessed this historic moment
when Europe's new generation of the Ariane family
lifted off – successfully – effectively reinstating
European access to space,” said ESA's Director
General Josef Aschbacher.
"An inaugural launch is a huge undertaking
from thousands of people who have worked
relentlessly for years. To see it perform
wonderfully at the first attempt is testament to
their dedication and a demonstration of European
excellence in engineering and technology. Heartfelt
thanks go to the teams at ESA, CNES, ArianeGroup and
Arianespace for their hard work to get to this
point. I also want to sincerely thank our Member
States for having enabled and supported the Ariane 6
programme along the way. Not always easy, but the
endurance shown has paid off handsomely today."
This inaugural flight, designated VA262, is
a demonstration flight whose aim is to show the
capabilities and prowess of Ariane 6 in escaping
Earth's gravity and operating in space.
Nevertheless, it had several passengers on board.
One hour after liftoff, the first set of
satellites on board Ariane 6 were released from the
upper stage and placed into an orbit 600 km above
Earth. Satellites and experiments from various space
agencies, companies, research institutes,
universities and young professionals were included
on this inaugural flight.
In addition to the rocket, the liftoff
demonstrated the functioning of the launch pad and
operations on the ground at Europe's Spaceport. The
new custom-built dedicated launch zone was built by
France's space agency CNES and allows for a faster
turnover of Ariane launches.
On the occasion of the launch, Philippe
Baptiste, CEO of CNES, said: “With this first
successful launch by Ariane 6, Europe has finally
recovered its capacity to access space. Beyond the
great emotion I am feeling right now, my first
thoughts are for all the teams in Kourou, Paris,
Vernon, Les Mureaux, Toulouse, Bremen,
Lampoldshausen, Liège, Barcelona, Colleferro, Zürich
and everywhere else in Europe who made this success
possible. I would like to acknowledge the commitment
of the employees of CNES, ESA, ArianeGroup,
Arianespace and our subcontractors. The last few
months have been intense, and I would like to thank
them all. Europe can be proud of its space
programme, Europe can be proud of its knowledge and
expertise. Together, let's prepare the future of
launchers and space.”
Ariane 6 was built by prime contractor and
design authority ArianeGroup. “With the successful
first flight of Ariane 6, the European space
industry has moved into a new era,” said Martin
Sion, CEO of ArianeGroup. “This historic launch
demonstrates the unfailing commitment of our teams
and partners, whom I would like to thank warmly for
this success, which reflects on the entire European
industry. Seeing Europe’s new launcher lift off into
space marks the culmination of an outstanding
technical and technological adventure, and the
beginning of a long history of Ariane 6 operations.
The next flight models are already in production and
the stages of the second model will be shipped to
the Guiana Space Centre this autumn for the first
commercial flight of Ariane 6.”
Next: tech demos,
controlled deorbit and capsule separation
With the placement of satellites into
orbit, Ariane 6 has demonstrated that it can
successfully launch its payloads into space, but
ground control has more in store for its inaugural
flight. Over the next hour, Ariane 6's upper stage
will show again that it can restart its Vinci engine
using the novel auxiliary propulsion unit. This
restart capability will allow Ariane 6 to drop off
multiple passengers into different orbits on future
flights and deorbit itself through Earth’s
atmosphere at the end of its mission, to ensure it
does not become space debris.
On this flight the Ariane 6 upper stage is
set to release two reentry capsules as it enters
Earth's atmosphere for a clean disposal to burn up
harmlessly, leaving no space debris in orbit.
The next Ariane 6 is planned for launch
this year on its first commercial flight under
Arianespace as operator and launch service provider.
“The success of this first flight marks the
start of Ariane 6’s operational career, giving
Europe an autonomous access to space,” added
Stéphane Israël, CEO of Arianespace. “The new
launcher’s order book is proof of the versatility of
Ariane 6 and of its capacity to accomplish a wide
range of missions into multiple orbits. It reflects
the confidence that customers have in Ariane 6 for
both their institutional and commercial missions. We
are eager to begin operating our new launcher.”
This is a joint press release from the
Ariane 6 Task Force (ESA, CNES, ArianeGroup,
Arianespace).
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