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ESA awards contract to begin work on Ramses asteroid mission

Officials with ESA and OHB Italia signed a contract worth €63m for preparatory work on the Ramses mission.
Image credit: ESA

The European Space Agency (ESA) has signed a contract with OHB to begin work on an asteroid mission. The signing took place during the recently concluded International Astronautical Congress (IAC) held in Milan. Officials with ESA and OHB Italia signed a contract worth €63m ($68m) for preparatory work on a mission called Rapid Apophis Mission for Space Safety (Ramses), to the asteroid Apophis ahead of its close flyby of the Earth in April 2029.

The mission will use the spacecraft design developed for the Hera mission that launched earlier to the asteroid Didymos and its moon Dimorphos, the target of NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test. Ramses will be a simplified version of Hera that uses a single-string architecture to minimise its cost.

ESA member states have yet to formally approve full funding for Ramses, a decision they will make at their next ministerial meeting in late 2025. However, to have Ramses ready for a launch in early 2028 work on the mission must begin before the ministerial.

The contract will allow OHB, the prime contractor for both Hera and Ramses, to begin procuring long-lead items and finalise the design of the spacecraft. It will also support work to coordinate the mission with those proposed by other agencies to study Apophis before or after the April 2029 flyby.

ESA said the funding for the Ramses contract came from its General Support Technology Programme and Space Safety Programme. About €20m euros came from Hera, which came in under budget.

“By developing and launching the Hera mission on time and under budget, we have demonstrated that ESA and its industrial and scientific partners can meet the challenging deadlines required by asteroid missions,” said Paolo Martino of ESA, leader of the Ramses project, in a statement. “With Ramses we are raising the bar even further, so we need to act now to ensure that, if our member states decide to support the mission in 2025, we can hit the ground running and reach Apophis in time.”

ESA did not disclose the estimated total cost of Ramses.