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ESA Director General discusses future of space travel

Conor Dillon
January 18, 2017

In an interview with Deutsche Welle, Director General of the European Space Agency, Jan Wörner, outlined the agency's plans for Mars, the moon and dealing with satellites in deeps space.

Jan Wörner Mission ExoMars
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/U. Anspach

DW: Mr. Wörner, what were you most excited to announce today?

Jan Wörner: For me, the most important thing was not the facts and figures - this is of course very nice - but the future, the strategy, how we are realizing Space 4.0 and uniting space in Europe.

What's the status of the moon village?

The moon village is a concept. Meaning that we, as ESA, are proposing to all different actors worldwide to go to the moon, to do something over there jointly. Which does not mean having each and every detail [arranged], or a fixed situation, but to use the moon as a place for different activities - mining, tourism, science, moon science - and also as a stepping stone for further travels into our solar system.

But there is no explicit mission or funding at this point?

Image: Reuters/S. Zhumatov

There are several explicit missions. But not one project of ESA's where we say, "This is what we're doing right now." We also have ideas, we have some missions together with the Russians, an idea of a lunar mission. And there are some other missions worldwide. We're getting a lot of contacts right now from different entities worldwide who're saying, "We'd like to go to the moon, let's be part of the moon village." So there are companies, but also space agencies.

Exoplanet fans received some news today about ESA's PLATO mission - can you tell us more about that mission and about the updates?

PLATO … will look for extrasolar planets, so we're looking for planets beyond our solar system. The discussion we had today was whether PLATO will be delayed because of ExoMars, and I have to clearly say no, that is not the case. We are using some of the funding we have in our budget … for ExoMars to recover and to help ExoMars 2020 to be realized. But this is not to the detrement of missions like PLATO or others that we have, like eLISA for gravitational waves. We are using what we get as additional funding from members state to secure ExoMars, and at the same time we are going on with PLATO.

There was some unfortunate news today about the Gallileo satellites, Europe's high-precision positioning system. What's wrong with them?

Satellite navigation depends strongly on the clocks on board of the satellite. This is something one has to understand. And I just announced that we have, on several satellites, a problem with the clocks. On each of the satellites we have four clocks. Unfortunately, some of the clocks failed. But this was part of the game, I mean, this is the reason we put four clocks on each of the satellites, in order to have a redundancy in case a clock failed. So what I can today is that none of the satellites failed, so the satellites are active. And there's no satellite with less than two active clocks. So we are looking to recover the other ones ... We are really looking into the thing in order to be sure that we have Gallileo working for a really long time.

Another German, Matthias Maurer, was announced as a reserve astronaut. What does his future look like?

We'll come back to this situation in about one month's time. Today I just said that in the 2009 class of astronauts, at the selection process, Matthias Maurer was a reserve in that class. And he is with ESA, and we will activate him. But we will present all of this in February.

Jan Wörner is the Director General of the European Space Agency.

 

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