26/01/2017                    
SENER, 50 Years In Space!
        SENER, 50 Years In Space!
                                        The SENER international engineering and technology group with Catalan headquarters in the Barcelona Synchrotron  Park (BSP) celebrates its 50th year working in space. The launchers tower project in Kiruna, Sweden, was the first Space project that was tendered for in Spain, and it was SENER that did it, in 1967. This project clearly heralded starting point for SENER’s career in the space sector.
Since then, SENER currently had about 300 devices and subsystems in different satellites and space vehicles for agencies from the US (NASA), Europe (ESA), Japan (JAXA) and Russia (Roscosmos). Among the more recent projects, some famous missions can be mentioned: Rosetta (2004), Herschel & Planck (2009), Curiosity (2011), Gaia (2013), LISA Pathfinder (2015) or ExoMars 2020.
In the 4 worldwide centers where SENER carries out its space projects (BSP in Barcelona, Bilbao and Madrid, Spain, and Warsaw, Poland), SENER provides engineering and production services in electromechanical components and systems, guidance, navigation and control, and attitude and orbit control systems, optical system and microgravity and life support systems.
Regarding SENER future, Space and Defense director Diego Rodríguez said in a recent interview that “our mission now is to continue to supply subsystems for the flight segment while aiming for other areas, such as launchers, and branching out to projects with a lower institutional profile and a clear commercial focus”.
As part of the different activities that will be carried out to celebrate these 50 years in space, SENER organizes the so-called “Star trajectory” comic strip contest. Participants must present by February 3 a one-page color draft (portrait or landscape A4 size) with 3 to 9 drawings, free technique, in Spanish, original and unpublished (more information in Spanish here).
                    
                                
                 
            Since then, SENER currently had about 300 devices and subsystems in different satellites and space vehicles for agencies from the US (NASA), Europe (ESA), Japan (JAXA) and Russia (Roscosmos). Among the more recent projects, some famous missions can be mentioned: Rosetta (2004), Herschel & Planck (2009), Curiosity (2011), Gaia (2013), LISA Pathfinder (2015) or ExoMars 2020.
In the 4 worldwide centers where SENER carries out its space projects (BSP in Barcelona, Bilbao and Madrid, Spain, and Warsaw, Poland), SENER provides engineering and production services in electromechanical components and systems, guidance, navigation and control, and attitude and orbit control systems, optical system and microgravity and life support systems.
Regarding SENER future, Space and Defense director Diego Rodríguez said in a recent interview that “our mission now is to continue to supply subsystems for the flight segment while aiming for other areas, such as launchers, and branching out to projects with a lower institutional profile and a clear commercial focus”.
As part of the different activities that will be carried out to celebrate these 50 years in space, SENER organizes the so-called “Star trajectory” comic strip contest. Participants must present by February 3 a one-page color draft (portrait or landscape A4 size) with 3 to 9 drawings, free technique, in Spanish, original and unpublished (more information in Spanish here).
More news
        		        	
            	
                	23/03/2020                 
                ICN2 and CReSA at the forefront against COVID-19            
                	
            	
                	10/03/2020                 
                Barcelona Synchrotron Park publishes a guide to promote biodiversity in its buildings            
                	
            	
                	27/02/2020                 
                Batteries of the future are investigated in the ALBA synchrotron            
                	
            	
                	10/02/2020                 
                With Solar Orbiter, SENER approaches a star            
                	
            	
                	27/01/2020                 
                Welcome, Natura Bissé!            
                	
            	
                	14/01/2020                 
                The Alba Synchrotron has lots of tricks up its sleeve!            
                    
        
        
        
    
 
                                     
                            		
                             
                                     
                            		
                             
                                     
                            		
                             
                
 
     home
home