A year ago today, a failure on the Integral spacecraft meant it fired its thrusters for likely the last time. Hear Richard Southworth, Operations Manager for the mission explain how in the 365 days since, the spacecraft in Earth orbit has continued to shed light on the violent gamma ray Universe.
Not only that, Integral should soon be working even more efficiently than before, as mission control teams implement an ingenious new way to control the 18-year-old spacecraft.
ESA‘s riskiest flyby – Solar Orbiter faces Earth debris
Your chance to name the next space weather mission
A fictional asteroid impact
André Kuipers on sheltering from oncoming space debris
ESA & UNOOSA talk trash: Directors Josef Aschbacher and Simonetta di Pippo in conversation
ESA & UNOOSA on space debris: sustainability over the long term
ESA & UNOOSA on: space debris and human spaceflight
ESA & UNOOSA on: the impact of debris
ESA & UNOOSA on space debris: Where today's debris came from
ESA-UNOOSA on space debris: The role of reentries
ESA-UNOOSA on space debris: We're launching more than ever
ESA-UNOOSA on space debris: The cost of avoiding collision
ESA-UNOOSA on space debris: Falling to Earth takes a long time
ESA-UNOOSA on: Satellites vs space debris
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