Development contract was signed with
Thales Alenia Space of Italy in December 2015. In November 2022, the satellite's launch was scheduled for the second half of 2024. In January 2025,
ESA signed a contract with
Arianespace to launch the satellite in the second half of 2025 on
Ariane 6. In September 2025 the satellite was transported from the
cleanroom in
Cannes, France, via
Turin, Italy to
French Guiana by the Ukrainian
Antonov Airlines. At the same time, control teams at
ESOC in
Darmstadt, Germany begun simulations of the Sentinel-1D's
Launch and Early Orbit Phase (LEOP). This was the first time an ESOC-operated satellite was launching on
Ariane 6. In early October 2025, the satellite has undergone functional tests at
Guiana Space Centre and had its
AIS antenna assemblies integrated. The spacecraft Flight Readiness Review took place in mid-October, paving the way for fuelling. By 20 October, the spacecraft was fuelled. On 24 October, it was encapsulated inside its
rocket fairing and later placed on top of the
Ariane 6 launch vehicle in a launch tower at the
Guiana Space Centre for the launch planned for 4 November 2025. The Ariane 6 flight VA265 with Sentinel-1D lifted off on 4 November 2025 at 21:03
UTC and the satellite was successfully deployed in its planned orbit 34 minutes after launch. The cost of the launch was
€82 million. The first acquisition of signal from the satellite occurred as planned Then, controllers at
ESOC deployed the satellite's solar arrays and radar antenna in a 10-hours long deployment sequence. First radar images taken by Sentinel-1D were released on 26 November 2025 during the ESA ministerial council held in
Bremen, Germany. The areas covered included northern Germany with the city of Bremen, as well as
Antarctica and
Tierra del Fuego. On 1 May 2026, Sentinel-1D completed its in-orbit commissioning phase and became fully operational. This marked the completion of
Sentinel-1, the first Sentinel mission, started in 2014 with the launch of
Sentinel-1A. == Gallery ==