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The first Indian crewed spaceflight, Gaganyaan-4, is planned for 2026. [1] Vast plans to launch the first ever commercial space station in 2026. [2] China plans to launch Chang'e 7 to explore the lunar south pole in late 2026. [3] The mission will include an orbiter, a relay satellite, a lander, a rover, and a mini-flying probe. [4]
Russian Astro Space Center: Sun–Earth L 2: Submillimetre / Far-IR astronomy NET 2030 [12] Angara A5: TBA: Roscosmos: TEM prototype: Roscosmos: Low Earth: Technology demonstration 2030 (TBD) [13] [14] Angara A5 / DM-03: Vostochny Site 1A: Roscosmos: Luna 28: Roscosmos: Selenocentric: Lunar lander Lunar sample return Sample return mission. 2030 ...
April 2026 4-person lunar flyby [7] [8] Martian Moons eXploration: 2026 Martian moon sample return mission [9] Chang'e 7: 2026 Lunar south pole lander, rover and flying probe [10] Lunar Polar Exploration Mission: 2026-2028 Lunar lander and rover [11] Chandrayaan-4: 2027 Lunar sample return mission [12] Artemis III: Mid 2027
View from the Operations Manager desk across the control room at ESOC in Darmstadt, Germany. The European Space Agency (ESA) operates a number of missions, both operational and scientific, including collaborations with other national space agencies such as the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), the National Centre for Space Studies (CNES), the Italian Space Agency (ASI), the German ...
SLS was considered as a potential launch vehicle for the proposed Large UV Optical Infrared Surveyor (LUVOIR) space telescope, which will have a main segmented mirror between 8 and 16 meters in diameter, [20] making it 300 times more powerful than Hubble Space Telescope. [21] It would be deployed at the Earth-Sun L2 point in 2035. [20] [22] [23]
[5] [6] [7] VA253 activities were listed among the top priorities at the reopening of the Guiana Space Center on 11 May 2020. [8] The launch was rescheduled for end of July 2020 [ 6 ] [ 9 ] [ 10 ] to place the satellites into a geostationary transfer orbit from which they will eventually be placed into geostationary orbit through their own ...
PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars (PLATO) is a space telescope under development by the European Space Agency for launch in 2026. [4] The mission goals are to search for planetary transits across up to one million stars, and to discover and characterize rocky extrasolar planets around yellow dwarf stars (like the Sun), subgiant stars, and red dwarf stars.
The Themis programme is an ongoing European Space Agency programme and carried by prime contractor, ArianeGroup, aiming to develop a prototype reusable rocket first stage and plans to conduct demonstration flights. The prototype rocket will also be called Themis.