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EarthCARE mission: 4 opto-mechanical subsystems from Bertin Technologies go into space

EarthCARE mission: 4 opto-mechanical subsystems from Bertin Technologies go into space Bertin Technologies 69292

On May 29, 2024 at 00:20 CEST, Space X’s Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from the Vandenberg Space Center in California (USA), carrying the EarthCARE satellite designed by the European Space Agency (ESA) in collaboration with its Japanese counterpart JAXA. For this mission, Bertin Technologies supplied 4 opto-mechanical subsystems for one of the satellite’s instruments, the ATLID high-spectral resolution atmospheric lidar.

The EarthCARE satellite carries four scientific instruments specifically designed for global observation of clouds, aerosols, solar and thermal radiation. The instruments – a cloud profiling radar, a multispectral imager, a broadband radiometer and an atmospheric lidar – work in a complementary way. EarthCARE’s objective is to quantify the interactions between these different elements, so that they can be properly integrated into numerical climate and weather models.

For this ambitious mission, Bertin Technologies has equipped ATLID, the ATmospheric LIDar dedicated to light detection and ranging, with 4 opto-mechanical systems:

o The Entrance Filtering Optic (EFO), which selects the wavelength and rejects the sun.

o The Blocking Filter (BF), which is a spatial and afocal filter.

This lidar will now measure the vertical profile of aerosols and fine clouds in the Earth’s atmosphere, including their altitude, thickness, optical properties, … It will operate at a wavelength of 355 nm, with a high spectral resolution receiver and a depolarization channel. The information gathered by ATLID will be essential for understanding the role of clouds and aerosols in the Earth’s energy balance.

Bertin Technologies, a specialist in ultra-stable instrumentation for the space sector, designed, developed, manufactured, tested and assembled all these on-board subsystems in Aix-en-Provence.