| Intensifying the Cooperation between ESA and NASA: a Win-Win Strategy? |
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bridges vol. 9, April 2006 / Feature Article
NASA and ESA: Two leaders in Spaceflight Founded as a European version of NASA (the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration) in 1975, the European Space Agency (ESA) has
followed its own path and has succeeded in federating 17 European
countries of which France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom are
dominant. In terms of budget, ESA resembles roughly one-fifth of NASA,
with an annual spending power of approximately €3 billion compared to
the $16.2 billion of NASA. In addition, ESA's mandate is restricted to
civilian space programs only. Still, ESA has been able to position
itself as a strong number two in this ranking of space agencies, mostly
because the ESA has pursued a very comprehensive and ambitious space
science program over the last two decades. When "Horizon 2000" was
launched in 1984, ESA had managed to launch only three space science
missions, COS-B, IUE, and Exosat. However 11 more missions followed by
2001 - all in all 17 spacecrafts. And if one includes the four doomed
Cluster satellites of the maiden Ariane 5 flight, the mass of the
launched space probes adds up to 30 tons. Horizon 2000 was such a
successful space science program that ESA extended it to "Horizon 2000
Plus" in 1994. Consequently six more missions had been launched as of
2001 and 13 others are in preparation. ESA is now starting its next set
of activities. At the last ministerial conference in December 2005 in
Berlin, the new space science program dubbed "Cosmic Vision 2020" was
launched, as well as an ambitious space exploration program named
"Aurora," which has the goal of sending humans to the Moon and on to
Mars - and this is where NASA enters the picture again.
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Founded as a European version of NASA (the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration) in 1975, the European Space Agency (ESA) has
followed its own path and has succeeded in federating 17 European
countries of which France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom are
dominant. In terms of budget, ESA resembles roughly one-fifth of NASA,
with an annual spending power of approximately €3 billion compared to
the $16.2 billion of NASA. In addition, ESA's mandate is restricted to
civilian space programs only. Still, ESA has been able to position
itself as a strong number two in this ranking of space agencies, mostly
because the ESA has pursued a very comprehensive and ambitious space
science program over the last two decades. When "Horizon 2000" was
launched in 1984, ESA had managed to launch only three space science
missions, COS-B, IUE, and Exosat. However 11 more missions followed by
2001 - all in all 17 spacecrafts. And if one includes the four doomed
Cluster satellites of the maiden Ariane 5 flight, the mass of the
launched space probes adds up to 30 tons. Horizon 2000 was such a
successful space science program that ESA extended it to "Horizon 2000
Plus" in 1994. Consequently six more missions had been launched as of
2001 and 13 others are in preparation. ESA is now starting its next set
of activities. At the last ministerial conference in December 2005 in
Berlin, the new space science program dubbed "Cosmic Vision 2020" was
launched, as well as an ambitious space exploration program named
"Aurora," which has the goal of sending humans to the Moon and on to
Mars - and this is where NASA enters the picture again.