Europe Launches Satellite to Map 1 Billion Stars

A Soyuz VS06 rocket with Gaia space observatory lifts off from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana on Dec. 19.

Thursday, 19 December 2013 10:33 AM EST ET

BERLIN — The European Space Agency has launched a satellite that it hopes will produce the most accurate three-dimensional map of our part of the Milky Way galaxy.

The agency says its Gaia satellite was lifted into space aboard a Russian-made Soyuz carrier system from French Guiana at 6:12 a.m.  Thursday.

Gaia is heading to a stable orbit called the Lagrange 2 point where Earth will shield it from the Sun.

Once it arrives, the satellite will begin its mission to survey some 1 billion stars in Earth's galactic neighborhood.

Gaia will also use its 1,000-megapixel camera to hunt for planets, asteroids and comets beyond our Solar System, and test a key part of Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity.

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Europe
The European Space Agency has launched a satellite that it hopes will produce the most accurate three-dimensional map of our part of the Milky Way galaxy.
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Thursday, 19 December 2013 10:33 AM
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