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      ESA : le programme ExoMars renaît enfin de ses cendres après l’imbroglio russe

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Wednesday, 10 April - 17:04

    Rover Rosalind Franklin Exomars

    Ce programme européen extrêmement ambitieux avait été temporairement sacrifié sur l'autel de la guerre en Ukraine; il va désormais se remettre en ordre de marche grâce à l'intervention d'une équipe de choc constituée de cadors de l'aérospatiale européenne.
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      Le rover ExoMars va se débarrasser des composants russes

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Monday, 20 March, 2023 - 10:09

    Exomars rover Rosalind Franklin

    La guerre en Ukraine a rompu le partenariat entre la Russie et l'Agence spatiale européenne sur la mission ExoMars. Deux instruments scientifiques russes vont être restitués. Une alternative est évaluée. [Lire la suite]

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      The long, tangled journey of a European rover to Mars takes another twist

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 23 November, 2022 - 16:59

    Artist's concept of the Rosalind Franklin ExoMars rover on Mars.

    Enlarge / Artist's concept of the Rosalind Franklin ExoMars rover on Mars. (credit: Adrian Mann/Stocktrek Images)

    The more than two dozen nations that make up the European Space Agency concluded their high-level "ministerial" meeting on Wednesday, establishing a budget and priorities for the next three years.

    A German delegate chosen to chair the meeting, Anna Christmann, said the space agency's plans reflect a bold agenda for Europe to lead in climate science and maintain independent and launch capability. The goal is for Europe to stand alongside the United States and China as a major space power. "We've shown Europe is ambitious," said Christmann at a media conference to discuss results of the meeting.

    Germany, France, and Italy remain the major players in ESA, combining to contribute nearly 60 percent of its overall funding. The member nations agreed to contribute 16.9 billion euro ($17.5 billion) to agency programs over the next three years. This is less than the 18.5 billion euro sought by ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher but still significantly higher than the total for the previous three-year period of 14.5 billion euro.

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