Rocket Replay: Watch Europe’s Last Space Station Automated Transfer Vehicle Soar

The last of Europe’s five automated transfer vehicles made a flawless launch to orbit yesterday (July 30). So far, all is going well with ATV Georges Lemaître as it brings a load of cargo to the International Space Station. You can watch the launch above. The ship is not only acting as a freighter, but a testbed for technology to help with docking and re-entry.

“It is with great pride that we saw the fifth successful launch of this beautiful spacecraft,” stated Thomas Reiter, the European Space Agency’s director of human spaceflight and operations, in a press release. “But the adventure doesn’t end here. ATV knowhow and technology will fly again to space as early as 2017, powering NASA’s Orion spacecraft with the European Service Module, ushering in the next generation of space exploration.”

It will take until Aug. 12 for the ATV to make its way to the space station. On its way, the vehicle will do a flyaround to test a laser infrared imaging sensor that could help future space vehicles dock with objects that don’t have docking ports.

Then it will stick on the space station for up to six months before making a planned re-entry, full of trash. In a first for Europe, how the ship breaks up will be carefully tracked to inform the design of future space vehicles that could survive re-entry. By the way, ESA has a stunning photo gallery of the rocket’s liftoff here, but we put a couple of samples below.

The Ariane 5 rocket carrying Europe’s last automated transfer vehicle blasts off from French Guiana July 29, 2014. Credit: ESA-S. Corvaja
Elizabeth Howell

Elizabeth Howell is the senior writer at Universe Today. She also works for Space.com, Space Exploration Network, the NASA Lunar Science Institute, NASA Astrobiology Magazine and LiveScience, among others. Career highlights include watching three shuttle launches, and going on a two-week simulated Mars expedition in rural Utah. You can follow her on Twitter @howellspace or contact her at her website.

Recent Posts

The First Supernovae Flooded the Early Universe With Water

Water is made of hydrogen and oxygen: H2O. The H was formed during the Big…

2 hours ago

Astronomers See Flares Coming from the Milky Way’s Supermassive Black Hole

There's plenty of action at the center of the galaxy, where a supermassive black hole…

4 hours ago

Earth’s Temporary Moon Might Have Come from THE Moon

A tiny asteroid loitering in a near-Earth orbit for a few months last year may…

16 hours ago

Galaxy Cores May be Giant Fuzzy Dark Stars

A fuzzy form of dark matter may clump up to become the cores of galaxies,…

16 hours ago

This Quasar Helped End the Dark Ages of the Universe

After the Big Bang came the Dark Ages, a period lasting hundreds of millions of…

19 hours ago

Webb Provides an Explanation for “Little Red Dots”

When a new space telescope is launched, it's designed to address specific issues in astronomy…

19 hours ago