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PIETRO CARNAGHI AC 20 TM 1800 - Twin-Pallet Vertical Turning Centre
X/Y -1,650 to +2,165mm / 1,250mm
Pallet dia 1,800mm (max load 5 ton)
Speed 1 - 320 rpm / 100kW
Ma
X/Y -1,650 to +2,165mm / 1,250mm Pallet dia 1,800mm (max load 5 ton) Speed 1 - 320 rpm / 100kW Ma...
Maynards Europe GmbH

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ESA’s Aeolus wind satellite launched

Posted on 18 Sep 2018 and read 4098 times
ESA’s Aeolus wind satellite launchedThe European Space Agency’s (ESA) Earth Explorer Aeolus satellite has been launched into polar orbit on a Vega rocket.

Using revolutionary laser technology, Aeolus will measure winds around the globe and play a key role in our quest to better understand the workings of our atmosphere.

Importantly, this novel mission will also improve weather forecasting.

Carrying the 1,360kg Aeolus satellite, the Vega rocket lifted off from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, at 21:20 GMT on 22 August.

Named after Aeolus, who in Greek mythology was ‘keeper of the winds’, this mission is the fifth in the family of ESA’s Earth Explorers.

ESA’s (www.esa.int) director of Earth observation programmes, Josef Aschbacher, said: “Aeolus carries the first instrument of its kind and uses a completely new approach to measuring the wind from space.

“Such pioneering technology meant that this was a demanding mission to develop, but thanks to all the teams involved, we are thrilled that this extraordinary satellite is now in orbit.”

This mission will provide an insight into how the wind influences the exchange of heat and moisture between the Earth’s surface and the atmosphere — important aspects for understanding climate change.

Aeolus carries one of the most advanced instruments ever to be put into orbit.

The first of its kind, the Aladin instrument generates pulses of ultra-violet light that are beamed down into the atmosphere to profile the world’s winds — a completely new approach to measuring the wind from space.

The satellite is being controlled from ESA’s European Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany.

Controllers will spend the next few months carefully checking and calibrating the mission as part of its commissioning phase.