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After 11 years of operations — nearly double its expected lifetime — Gaia ran out of fuel, prompting its operators at ESA to power down and retire the spacecraft. Since it launched in December ...
While it was getting ready to power down its Gaia spacecraft, the European Space Agency encountered some unusual resistance.
The Gaia Observatory from the European Space Agency (ESA) has now been powered down and sent into a “retirement orbit” around the sun — but data from the mission will continue to be released ...
On Thursday 27 March, the European Space Agency (ESA) sent its last messages to the Gaia Spacecraft. They told Gaia to shut down its communication systems and central computer and said goodbye to this ...
But its legacy lives on. Rendering of the Gaia telescope in space.Credit...ESA/ATG medialab; ESO, via S. Brunier Supported by By Katrina Miller From ancient star streams to the innards of white ...
Europe's Gaia space telescope was powered down and sent into "retirement" on Thursday after a decade revealing the secrets of the Milky Way, but its observations will fuel discoveries for decades ...
Gaia Renewables 1, listed on the Cape Town Stock Exchange (CTSE ... government’s first and second round of allocations in the Renewable Energy Independent Power Producers Procurement Programme ...
"We will never forget Gaia, and Gaia will never forget us." Europe's star-mapping Gaia space observatory has entered its final orbit, after gathering valuable cosmic data for more than a decade.
Extending Cohesity Gaia to data stored on-premises empowers ... Retriever — the Cohesity Gaia discovery assistant brings the power of generative AI to data backups and archives.