europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
The BepiColombo Mercury arrival phase mission control team gathers in the main control room at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) to begin the extensive simulations campaign.
Credits: ESA
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
Thirty years after the European Space Agency first demonstrated the power of flying two satellites in very close formation, the concept was recently recreated. By temporarily positioning two Copernicus Sentinel-1 radar satellites to replicate the pioneering ERS-1–ERS-2 ‘tandem mission’, ESA achieved one-day repeat imaging of the same Antarctic region. The results once again demonstrate how this approach can be used to measure glacier motion and pinpoint the critical grounding line with exceptional precision.
This ice-flow velocity map of glaciers and ice streams in the Antarctic Peninsula and West Antarctica is derived from multiannual Sentinel-1 observations. The map provides regional context for the study areas, with the Scar Inlet Ice Shelf highlighted in the inset.
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Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data, processed by ENVEO
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
Thirty years after the European Space Agency first demonstrated the power of flying two satellites in very close formation, the concept was recently recreated. By temporarily positioning two Copernicus Sentinel-1 radar satellites to replicate the pioneering ERS-1–ERS-2 ‘tandem mission’, ESA achieved one-day repeat imaging of the same Antarctic region. The results once again demonstrate how this approach can be used to measure glacier motion and pinpoint the critical grounding line with exceptional precision.
The image shows Evans Ice Stream – a six-day Sentinel-1A–Sentinel-1C interferogram (left), a one-day Sentinel-1C–Sentinel-1D interferogram (centre), and a Sentinel-1C–Sentinel-1D double-difference interferogram (right). The shorter repeat-pass interval and double-difference processing clearly reveal tidal deformation zones and shear zones, demonstrating the enhanced capability for mapping ice dynamics, shear zones and the grounding line.
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Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data, processed by ENVEO
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
The Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission captures Canada’s Great Bear Lake in striking colours.
Straddling the Arctic Circle, Great Bear Lake lies in the Northwest Territories of Canada. Its area of 31 328 sq km makes it the largest freshwater lake entirely within Canadian borders and the fourth largest in North America.
Irregular in shape and containing many small islands, Great Bear Lake is surrounded by boreal forests and tundra, providing a rich habitat for diverse wildlife. It’s famous for its cold, clear waters, which are covered with ice from late November through to July.
The presence of lake ice can be monitored effectively by imaging sensors and standard satellite observations. In this false-colour image, three specific bands from Copernicus Sentinel-2’s visible and infrared channels have been used to process the image. Each channel has been assigned a colour to enhance the contrasts between different surfaces. This band combination is particularly suitable for monitoring ice melt, water bodies and vegetation health.
A massive sheet of sea ice covering most of the lake can be seen in shades ranging from bright blue to cyan, depending on the ice thickness. This range of colours is due to ice and snow having a higher reflectance in the visible part of the spectrum, here assigned to blue. The image, which was captured on 17 June 2026, features an intricate network of seasonal fractures, cracks and shifting ice floes across the lake surface.
Because water reflects very little light back to the satellite, it appears dark blue or black, making areas of melted ice easy to distinguish. These dark areas are typically visible along the shorelines and in the bays, where shallower water warms more quickly than the deeper centre of the lake, creating a clear moat of ice-free water between the land and the remaining ice sheet. Black fractures of open water can also be seen in the icy surface.
Shades of green dominate the landmass surrounding the lake denoting the northern boreal forest and the tundra vegetation, greening as the Arctic summer approaches.
Distinct reddish-orange and pink patches are scattered across the green landscape, indicating exposed rocky terrain, typical of the Canadian Shield, sparsely vegetated tundra or older fire scars that have not yet fully revegetated.
The Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission is based on a two-satellite constellation. Each satellite carries a high-resolution camera that images Earth’s surface in 13 spectral bands. This capability, together with the mission’s frequent revisits over the same area and its high-resolution imagery, provides crucial information about the conditions on Earth, such as land use, vegetation health, and changes in inland water bodies and the coastal environment.
Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2026), processed by ESA; CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
europeanspaceagency posted a photo:
On 1 June 2026, the BepiColombo mission control team across ESA, JAXA and industry met at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) to kick off the simulations campaign in preparation for the Mercury arrival phase. Throughout the campaign, this team of teams will rehearse the key separation steps that comprise arrival: MTM separation, Mercury orbit insertion, MPO-Mio separation, and MOSIF sunshield separation.
Credits: ESA
raaen99 has added a photo to the pool:
"In spring they were a tangle of white froth and carried primroses and cowslips at their base... In winter they would be peppered with scarlet, black and rust berries..." — Anonymous
The theme for “Smile on Saturday” for the 11th of July is “berries and cherries”. Although it is winter where I live, I have access to my archive of photographs, so I have chosen an image taken in autumn a few years ago, taken whilst on a walk out and about. I came across some blackberries ripening in the afternoon sun in the overgrown ruins of a garden of an old house that sadly was later demolished. Blackberries are considered to be quite a noxious weed here, and they do invade areas of farmland and costal areas quite pervasively, yet I love them. They remind me of blackberrying as a child. I like eating blackberries, and whether dark and ripe, or richly red and jewel like in their unripe state, I think they are beautiful to photograph. Of course, I do have to watch out for all the prickles that grow along their stems! I hope you like my choice for the theme and that it makes you smile.
Gemeenten en provincies mogen deze zomer probleemwolven eerder laten afschieten, laat staatssecretaris Silvio Erkens weten. Maar hoe weet je of een wolf ook daadwerkelijk een probleemwolf is? Volgens het kabinet moet een gesprek met een psychiater uitkomst bieden.
“Een psychiater kan zo’n wolf aankijken en zien hoe de ogen staan”, stelt Erkens. “Een gesprek over de jeugd, eerdere delicten en de motieven van de wolf moet meer duidelijk maken over de incidenten. Net als een onderzoek bij het Pieter Baan Centrum. Misschien heeft zo’n wolf wel een hele moeilijke jeugd gehad, een verslaving of een ontwikkelingsstoornis. Moeten we allemaal rekening mee houden. Anders mag je ‘m gewoon neerschieten.”
“Is een wolf ontoerekeningsvatbaar? Is het een relwolf die gewoon wat foute vrienden heeft en in een moeilijke periode in zijn leven zit? Zouden we een wolf met veel therapie niet opnieuw in de bossen kunnen laten herintegreren? Was de wolf vroeger een bloedmaatje van wolf Bram en zweert hij nu wraak? Zulke vragen moeten we stellen voordat we zeker weten of een wolf een probleemwolf is. Maar áls het een probleemwolf is, dan grijpen we keihard in.”
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