ESA The BNSC was the third largest financial contributor to the General Budget of the
European Space Agency, contributing 17.4%, to its Science Programme and to its robotic exploration initiative the
Aurora programme. Investments were also made in the ESA telecommunications programme 'ARTES' in order to develop payload technology used, for example, in the satellites of
Inmarsat, the UK based mobile satellite operator. The BNSC partnership co-funded a private sector project led by Avanti Communications to build a satellite called HYLAS to provide broadband communications to rural and remote users. Current projects in the field of space science include
LISA Pathfinder, for which UK industry is the prime contractor and UK universities are building major payload elements; the astrometry
Gaia mission, for which UK industry is supplying the detectors, avionics, software and data processing electronics; and the
James Webb Space Telescope, for which a UK consortium led by the
UK Astronomy Technology Centre is building the European part of the Mid Infra Red Instrument (MIRI)[https://archive.today/20120805170501/http://www.stsci.edu/jwst/instruments/miri/. The UK has contributed the SPIRE instrument for the
Herschel Space Observatory and detector and cooling system technology for the
Planck cosmic microwave background mission. In the field of Earth observation, projects include the ESA
ADM-Aeolus wind profiling mission, for which UK industry is the prime contractor and
CryoSat-2 which is directed by UK scientist Professor Duncan Wingham of
University College London. Recent BNSC activities include the Mosaic small satellite programme, which led to the launch of the
TopSat high resolution EO mission and also the
Disaster Monitoring Constellation.
Harwell In November 2008, BNSC announced new contributions to ESA and an agreement in principle to establish an ESA centre at the
Harwell Science and Innovation Campus in
Oxfordshire. The ESA facility at Harwell was opened officially on 22 July 2009. The name of the ESA centre is the
European Centre for Space Applications and Telecommunications. In February 2009, BNSC, ESA and
Reaction Engines Limited announced a
public–private partnership funding scheme to demonstrate key technologies of the
SABRE engine for the proposed
Skylon spaceplane. ==Partners==