Venus Express plunging into the atmosphere
After eight years in orbit, ESA’s Venus Express has completed routine science observations and is preparing for a daring plunge into the planet’s hostile atmosphere.
Venus Express was launched on 9 November 2005, and arrived at Venus on 11 April 2006.
It has been orbiting Venus in an elliptical 24-hour loop that takes it from a distant 66 000 km over the south pole — affording incredible global views — to an altitude of around 250 km above the surface at the north pole, close to the top of the planet’s atmosphere.
With a suite of seven instruments, the spacecraft has provided a comprehensive study of the ionosphere, atmosphere and surface of Venus.
This video includes interviews in English with Håkan Svedhem, ESA mission scientist and Patrick Martin, ESA Venus Express mission manager
After eight years in orbit, ESA's Venus Express has completed routine science observations and is preparing for a daring plunge into the planet's hostile atmosphere. We'll be talking more about this mission during our #SurfVenus Hangout on Thursday 10 July at 3pm UTC.
Video: http://youtu.be/EkjiF7c26mE
#SurfVenus Hangout: https://plus.google.com/events/cp2jh8gs5t0geuq9ap0hqeujg2c
#venusexpress #Venus #aerobrake #ESAHangout
Ciao, Venus Express. Time to melt with all those Veneras.
This is where naughty Christians go if they masturbate.
Send water to Venus or a mirror to melt its north pole.
good work