Skip to main content
Logo GMV

Main navigation

  • Sectors
    • Icono espacio
      Space
    • Icono Aeronáutica
      Aeronautics
    • Icono Defensa y Seguridad
      Defense and Security
    • Icono Sistemas Inteligentes de Transporte
      Intelligent Transportation Systems
    • Icono Automoción
      Automotive
    • Icono Ciberseguridad
      Cybersecurity
    • Icono Servicios públicos Digitales
      Digital Public Services
    • Icono Sanidad
      Healthcare
    • Icono Industria
      Industry
    • Icono Financiero
      Financial
    • Icono Industria
      Services
    • All Sectors

    Highlight

    EMV Transit
    EMV Transit: technology that keeps on working
  • Talent
  • About GMV
    • Get to Know the Company
    • History
    • Management Team
    • Certifications
    • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Communication
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Magazine GMV News
    • Press Room
    • Media library
    • Latest from GMV

Secondary navigation

  • Products A-Z
  • GMV Global
    • Global (en)
    • Spain and LATAM (es - ca - en)
    • Germany (de - en)
    • Portugal (pt - en)
    • Poland (pl - en)
    • All branches and all GMV sites
  • Home
  • Communication
  • News
Back
New search
Date
  • Space

All systems go for the launch of IXV

02/02/2015
  • Print
Share

IXV (Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle), the European Space Agency’s atmospheric reentry demonstrator vehicle, is now putting the final touches to its preparations for its upcoming launch on 11 February from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana onboard a European VEGA rocket.

IXV has been conceived as the technological platform for flight-testing the technologies and critical systems of controlled atmospheric reentry of return missions from low earth orbit (LEO). It can be considered to be an intermediate step at experimentation level for future European space applications, ranging from transport missions to space exploration missions.

Thales Alenia Space Italy has been responsible for the design, development, integration and validation of IXV, leading a consortium of nearly 40 European partners including Europe’s main space firms, research institutes and universities.

This consortium of European firms includes GMV, which has led the development of two important subsystems and played a key role in another:

  • OBSW, Onboard Software. GMV has been responsible for the design, development and validation of the onboard software (OBSW) that directs the vehicle autonomously throughout its whole flight after separation from the launcher.
  • VMI, Vehicle Model Identification. GMV has been responsible for the design, development and validation of the techniques and algorithms for reconstructing IXV’s flight from readings taken during reentry, with the aim of improving aerodynamic prediction models for future reentry vehicles similar to IXV.
  • GNC, Guidance, Navigation and Control. GMV has been responsible for the design, development and validation of IXV’s navigation function, which calculates the vehicle’s position and speed during the flight together with other derived parameters for guaranteeing vehicle integrity during atmospheric reentry.

IXV will be placed into orbit by a Vega rocket, reaching a height of about 450 km, allowing it to reach a reentry speed of 7.5 km/s, 27,000 km/h. During its atmospheric reentry, controlled by thrusters and aerodynamic flaps, it will collect a large amount of data on the hypersonic and supersonic flight phases, for subsequent analysis. Finally, the craft will then deploy a series of parachutes to slow its descent for a safe splashdown in the Pacific Ocean to await recovery and analysis.

The complete mission will last for approximately 1 hour and 40 minutes, before parachuting down into the Pacific Ocean to be picked up by a specially equipped recovery vessel.

The data collected during the mission, verifying atmospheric reentry technologies under real conditions, will be a vital input for the development in Europe of new-generation reentry vehicles. These technologies include those of aerodynamics, aerothermodynamics, heat shields and the flight-control and navigation systems. It is therefore an essential mission for the development of future critical technologies in the fields of autonomous or crewed missions.
 

  • Print
Share

Related

emissary
  • Space
Europe strengthens its space security with the EMISSARY project
satelite
  • Space
GMV renews its contract with the French Space Agency for the maintenance and evolution of the BAS3E space surveillance simulation system
debris
  • Space
GMV wins a contract with ESA to study the orbital neighbourhood of a space mission

Contact

Alameda dos Oceanos, 115
1990-392 Lisbon, Portugal

Tel. +351 308801495
Fax. +351 213866493

Contact menu

  • Contact
  • GMV around the world

Blog

  • Blog

Sectors

Sectors menu

  • Space
  • Aeronautics
  • Defense and Security
  • Intelligent Transportation Systems
  • Automotive
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital Public Services
  • Healthcare
  • Industry
  • Financial
  • Services
  • Talent
  • About GMV
  • Shortcut to
    • Press Room
    • News
    • Events
    • Blog
    • Products A-Z
© 2025, GMV Innovating Solutions S.L.

Footer menu

  • Contact
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Footer Info

  • Commitment to the Environment
  • Financial Information