Launch of ESA's CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS) Delayed
takyon writes:
Europe's launch of space telescope called off at last minute
Europe's space agency was planning to send a new telescope to study far-off planets into space Tuesday but the launch was called off at the last minute.
A spokesperson for the European Space Agency (ESA) said the launch would not go ahead today because of a problem with the launch device.
Called CHEOPS (CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite), the telescope was due to be launched aboard a Soyuz-Fregat rocket from Europe's spaceport in Kourou in French Guiana early Tuesday. The launch had been due to be livestreamed on the ESA's website. During final countdown operations, the Soyuz launcher's automated sequence was interrupted at 1 hour 25 minutes before liftoff, Arianespace, the satellite company operating the launch, said in a statement. The new launch date will be announced as soon as possible, it added.
The telescope's mission is to observe individual stars already known to host exoplanets -- planets outside our solar system -- focusing on planets sized in the Earth to Neptune range. To date, 4,143 planets have been discovered around stars other than the sun, ESA said.
CHEOPS is a small space telescope with a cost cap of a50 million. It will measure the radii of previously discovered exoplanets, providing targets for future missions.
See also: Europe's Cheops telescope will profile distant planets
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ESA Selects ARIEL Exoplanet Survey as a Medium Class Mission
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