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Goonhilly Earth Station supports three lunar and solar missions

The satellite communications innovator and space gateway in Cornwall is providing support for is the Chandrayaan-3 lunar lander mission

Goonhilly Earth Station (Image: Goonhilly Earth Station Ltd)

Satellite communications innovator and space gateway Goonhilly Earth Station has announced that it will provide "crucial support" for three upcoming lunar and deep space missions.

The centre, located in Helston, Cornwall, will collaborate with the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the European Space Agency (ESA), and Intuitive Machines.

The first two missions, undertaken by ISRO, aims to "revolutionise" our understanding of celestial bodies. For Chandrayaan-3, a lunar lander mission which launched on July 14, Goonhilly and ESA provided support during the cruise, lunar orbit, and on-surface operations phases.

Goonhilly's involvement with the Aditya-L1 solar observatory mission will also encompass vital assistance during the cruise and operations phases.

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Goonhilly’s support for these missions is being delivered in partnership with the European Space Agency. Goonhilly’s 32m antenna is the only commercial deep space antenna that is part of ESA's network of deep space ground stations located across the globe.

ESA's deep-space communication antennas, supplemented by Goonhilly’s GHY-6, will offer indispensable support to both the Chandrayaan-3 and Aditya-L1 missions. These antennas will track the spacecraft, precisely determine their locations during critical stages, facilitate command transmission, and receive crucial telemetry and scientific data which will be forwarded to ESA’s ESOC mission control centre in Darmstadt, Germany, before being sent on to ISRO for analysis.

Inside Goonhilly Earth Station (Image: Goonhilly Earth Station Ltd)

In the case of the Chandrayaan-3 ‘Moon craft’, Goonhilly’s GHY-6 antenna will be working alongside ESA’s Kourou antenna in French Guiana to provide this mission support, complementing ISRO’s own stations and NASA’s Deep Space Network.