ESA title
Hera Science Team
Space Safety

Hera Science Team

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ESA / Space Safety / Hera

The starting point for any exploration-focused space mission is the formulation of questions to be asked. The spacecraft that sets forth from Earth is how those questions get to be answered, and the people who set them – and will oversee their solving – are the scientists associated with the mission.

In the case of Hera, ESA’s first planetary defence spacecraft, its science team is notably wide and international in character, indicating the broad interest taken in this mission, inherited in turn from NASA’s DART mission before it, which impacted Hera’s target Dimorphos asteroid in September 2022.

ESA’s Hera project scientist Michael Kueppers therefore liaises not only with Principal Investigator Patrick Michel of France’s CNRS Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur but they preside over an entire Hera Science Management Board, presiding in turn over various working groups focused on different scientific aspects of the mission as well as the leads of the individual instruments.

Accordingly Hera’s Science Team encompasses France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Spain, UK, Czech Republic, Greece, Switzerland and Finland, extending in turn to Japan – contributing Hera’s Thermal Infrared Imager – and the US – with 12 scientists being supported through NASA’s Hera Participating Scientist Program.

Hera Science Team
Hera Science Team

Hera Science Management Board (SMB) 

ESA Hera Project Scientist + Mission PI + Science Advisors:

Prof. Alan Fitzsimmons, Queen's University Belfast, United Kingdom

Prof. Simon Green, Open University, United Kingdom

Pr. Monica Lazzarin, University of Padova, Italy

Dr. Stephan Ulamec, DLR, Germany

Pr. Paul Abell, NASA, USA

Pr. Seiji Sugita, The University of Tokyo, Japan

Honorary Mission Advisor: Sir Dr. Brian May, UK

 

Impact Working Group Chairs:

Dr. Martin Jutzi, University of Bern, Switzerland

Dr. Sabina Raducan, University of Bern, Switzerland

Dr. Kai Wünnemann, Berlin Museum für Naturkunde, Germany

 

Ground Based Observations Working Group Chairs:

Dr. Benoît Carry, CNRS Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur, Lagrange LabUniversité Côte d’Azur, France

Dr. Julia de Leon, lnstituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Spain

Dr. Petr Pravec, Ondřejov Observatory, Czech Republic

Dr. Colin Snodgrass, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

 

Dynamics and Physical Properties Working Group Chairs:

Pr. Adriano Campo Bagatin, University Alicante, Spain

Pr. Sébastien Charnoz, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, France

Dr. Kleomenis Tsiganis, University of Thessaloniki, Greece

 

Data Analysis and Interpretation Working Group Chairs:

Dr. Alain Hérique, University of Grenoble-Alpes, IPAG, France: WG5 co-chair

Dr. Ozgur Karaketin, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Belgium

Dr. Naomi Murdoch, lSAE-Supaero, France

Prof. Paolo Tortora, University of Bologna, ltaly

Dr. Jean-Baptiste Vincent, DLR, Germany

 

Instrument leads:

Asteroid Framing Cameras (AFC): Jean-Baptiste Vincent, DLR, Germany

Thermal Infrared Imager (TIRI): Tatsu Okada, JAXA, Japan

Hyperspectral Imager (Hyperscout-H): Julia de Leon, Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, Spain

Low-Frequency Radar (JuRA): Alain Hérique, University of Grenoble-Alpes, IPAG, France

Gravimeter (GRASS): Ozgur Karatekin, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Belgium

Near-InfraRed Imager (ASPECT): Tomas Kohout, University of Helsinki, Finland

Dust detector and analyzer (VISTA): Ernesto Palomba, INAF, Rome, Italy

Milani Cubesat Camera: Fabio Ferrari, Politecnico di Milano, Italy

Radio Science: Paolo Tortora, University of Bologna, Italy

 

For detailed information on the Hera Science Team, visit https://www.heramission.space/