Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Field
-
-ground interfaces. CHIME mission: CHIME (Copernicus Hyperspectral Imaging Mission for the Environment) provides hyperspectral imaging data to support environmental monitoring, agriculture and climate
-
carries out technological research in the areas of optical component technology, optical instrumentation (spectro-radiometric imaging instruments in the visible and infrared, interferometry, optical
-
of imaging detectors, optical communication and quantum communication. Depending on the your interests, technical competences and project constrains in 2026/27, you will support one or more of these
-
security-oriented workflows. This includes designing methodologies that ensure traceability, robustness and bias mitigation in AI models, as well as creating prototype tools that demonstrate how transparent
-
phase B through in-flight commissioning to routine mission operations until the end of the mission. Duties You will be initially assigned to the Copernicus Sentinels Imaging Missions Operations Unit
-
. mechatronics, control theory, computer science, image processing) as well as a solid foundation in mathematics and physics is strongly desirable. Proficiency in the use of computer aided engineering tools is an
-
, global ocean circulation and height systems. In addition, the temporal variations of gravity and the geoid help to measure mass exchange processes in the Earth system. Knowledge about the time-varying
-
, Directorate of Earth Observation Programmes. The Sterna project is the operational follow-on to the successful Arctic Weather Satellite (AWS) project, where a prototype satellite (PFM) for the subsequent Sterna
-
Tools, Methods and Standards: Leading the Agency centre of excellence for Artificial Intelligence and processing technologies for space applications; Leading the centre of excellence for Advanced
-
and system analyses, to performance analysis, constellation mission analysis and simulations followed by experimentation with prototype elements in the navigation laboratory. We are looking