ESA picks Germany’s Exolaunch for arctic weather satellite mission

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The European Space Agency (ESA) has picked Germany’s Exolaunch to provide critical launch services for its Artic Weather Satellite (AWS), as the agency looks to outsource more of its space missions to private companies.  

Already built and currently undergoing testing in Germany, the AWS is expected to dramatically improve weather forecasts in the Arctic — a region that currently lacks data for accurate short-term forecasts.

The microsatellite is due to launch in June this year aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The launcher will propel the AWS some 600 kilometres into the air, after which it will separate and begin orbiting the Earth. 

Key to the mission will be the successful separation of the satellite from the rocket, a critical moment that, if something goes wrong, can result in a launch failure.

Here’s where Exolaunch comes in. The company’s CarboNIX device is billed as the lowest-shock and lowest-tumbling separation system ever used in space. Key to this instrument is a patented synchronous spring pusher system that smoothly deploys satellites.

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carboNIX satellite separation system