Geomaticians

Heritage ERS-2 Satellite Set To Reenter Earth’s Atmosphere

Heritage ERS-2 Satellite Set To Reenter Earth’s Atmosphere
After a 16-year working life, the second European Remote Sensing Satellite (ERS-2) is making its final descent into Earth’s atmosphere. ERS-2 returned information that influenced the perception of climate change and the understanding of the planet.
The European Space Agency (ESA) retired ERS-2 in 2011. It was originally launch in 1995. The Space Debris Office has been closely following the satellite’s 13 year orbital decay and will monitor ERS-2 natural reentry into earth’s atmosphere. This is expected to happen around mid-February.
ERS-2 launched in 1995 four years after its sister satellite ERS-1. Both satellites carried an imaging synthetic aperture radar, a radar altimeter, sensors to measure ocean-surface temperature and winds at sea and other impressive instruments. ERS-2 had an additional sensor to measure atmospheric ozone.