German Aerospace Center

German Aerospace Center




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Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt German Aerospace Center





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Climate, mobility and technology are changing globally. DLR uses the expertise of its 55 research institutes and facilities to develop solutions to these challenges. Our 10,000 employees share a mission – to explore Earth and space and develop technologies for a sustainable future. In doing so, DLR contributes to strengthening Germany's position as a prime location for research and industry.

DLR is the Federal Republic of Germany's research centre for aeronautics and space. We conduct research and development activities in the fields of aeronautics, space, energy, transport, security and digitalisation. The German Space Agency at DLR plans and implements the national space programme on behalf of the federal government. Two DLR project management agencies oversee funding programmes and support knowledge transfer.
A chip can be the heart of a quantum computer. Atoms or ions can be separately trapped on it. These can serve as information carriers, so-called qubits or quantum bits. Quantum computing is expected to open up new opportunities in materials research, medicine and the energy and transport sectors.
The main objective of the CHEOPS mission is to investigate the structure of exoplanets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune, or with a diameter of between 10,000 and 50,000 kilometres.
Since 2021, air­lines have had to off­set emis­sions on in­ter­na­tion­al flights that ex­ceed the av­er­age val­ues for 2019. This is done with the help of car­bon diox­ide com­pen­sa­tion projects that in­vest in re­new­able en­er­gy sources or the preser­va­tion of forests, for ex­am­ple – that is, re­duce or store green­house gas emis­sions.
How can an im­pres­sion of three-di­men­sion­al­i­ty be cre­at­ed us­ing a two-di­men­sion­al medi­um? In art, this ques­tion arose cen­turies ago. Cer­tain paint­ing tech­niques have since evolved to sim­u­late ef­fects of light and shad­ow, cre­at­ing a 3D ef­fect for the view­er. Such ef­fects are re­ferred to as trompe-l'œil – they 'de­ceive the eye'.
The EDEN ISS green­house, de­vel­oped by the Ger­man Aerospace Cen­ter (Deutsches Zen­trum für Luft- und Raum­fahrt; DLR), has been in Antarc­ti­ca since 2018. It was de­signed to con­duct re­search in­to food pro­duc­tion in deserts and cold re­gions, as well as ex­plor­ing the pos­si­bil­i­ty of grow­ing fresh food in the hos­tile con­di­tions of the Moon or Mars. Plant sci­en­tist Jess Bunchek from NASA's Kennedy Space Cen­ter is spend­ing a year in the eter­nal ice as a DLR guest re­searcher. In this blog, she will re­port about her ex­cit­ing re­search on Earth's cold­est con­ti­nent.
On 18 Febru­ary 2021, the Per­se­ver­ance rover of NASA's Mars 2020 mis­sion land­ed on Mars safe and sound. The re­search mis­sion, ini­tial­ly sched­uled to last two years, has be­gun. In this blog, DLR re­searcher Nicole Schmitz, to­geth­er with her col­league Frank Preusker, will re­port reg­u­lar­ly on the progress of the mis­sion and the cam­era ex­per­i­ment in which they are in­volved. Both are part of the Sci­ence Team of the Mast­cam-Z in­stru­ment, a stereo cam­era lo­cat­ed on Per­se­ver­ance's ap­prox­i­mate­ly two-me­tre-high mast.
Tilman Spohn, Prin­ci­pal In­ves­ti­ga­tor of the HP3 in­stru­ment on the In­Sight mis­sion, has been pro­vid­ing us with reg­u­lar up­dates on the 'Mole' since Febru­ary 2019: what's hap­pen­ing on Mars right now? What's the weath­er like? How deep in the sur­face is the Mars 'Mole'?
If there is one in­dus­try or sci­en­tif­ic dis­ci­pline in 2020 in which the in­fa­mous coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic has left rel­a­tive­ly few traces, it is space ex­plo­ration. Ev­ery­thing ris­es and falls; New­ton and Ke­pler send their re­gards. There is sim­ply no way around it. When ex­pen­sive met­al box­es are in or­bit around Earth or out in the depths of the So­lar Sys­tem, with or with­out valu­able hu­man pas­sen­gers, some­one on the ground has to make sure that the mis­sion con­tin­ues. For ob­vi­ous rea­sons, con­trol of it must not sim­ply be giv­en up, as in most cas­es this would lead to the to­tal loss of the very valu­able space­craft.
Tilman Spohn, Prin­ci­pal In­ves­ti­ga­tor of the HP3 in­stru­ment on the In­Sight mis­sion, has been pro­vid­ing us with reg­u­lar up­dates on the 'Mole' since Febru­ary 2019: what's hap­pen­ing on Mars right now? What's the weath­er like? How deep in the sur­face is the Mars 'Mole'?
Af­ter three years of metic­u­lous da­ta pro­cess­ing and com­pre­hen­sive qual­i­ty con­trol, the World Set­tle­ment Foot­print 2015 is now avail­able. With a res­o­lu­tion of 10 me­tres, the new world map re­veals set­tle­ment struc­tures on Earth in 2015.

A re­search team led by Thushara Pil­lai from Boston Uni­ver­si­ty and the Max Planck In­sti­tute for Ra­dio As­tron­o­my in Bonn has just pub­lished their work on the in­ter­ac­tion of in­ter­stel­lar mag­net­ic fields with new­ly form­ing stars in Na­ture As­tron­o­my.
In his log­book, HP3 In­stru­ment Lead Tilman Spohn gives us the lat­est up­dates re­gard­ing the In­Sight mis­sion and our HP3 in­stru­ment - the 'Mole' - which will ham­mer in­to the Mar­tian sur­face.
Cu­rios­i­ty is high, a lot has been said and writ­ten, but no­body knows what is re­al­ly hap­pen­ing with the star Betel­geuse. Its lu­mi­nos­i­ty has de­creased dras­ti­cal­ly over the last five months. Now, there is spec­u­la­tion that the star could soon be­come a su­per­no­va – the ex­plo­sion at the end of a large ce­les­tial body's life.
Earth ob­ser­va­tion and ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence can be used to as­sist with sus­tain­able de­vel­op­ment de­ci­sions. Earth ob­ser­va­tion and ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence can be used to as­sist with sus­tain­able de­vel­op­ment de­ci­sions.
Can low-cost drones ca­pa­ble of car­ry­ing as much weight as a pick­up truck be built and op­er­at­ed cost-ef­fec­tive­ly? An in­ter­ac­tive event for­mat brought rep­re­sen­ta­tives from in­dus­try and hu­man­i­tar­i­an aid or­gan­i­sa­tions and DLR re­searchers to­geth­er to dis­cuss this top­ic.
No mat­ter how many mea­sure­ment flights we have al­ready con­duct­ed, just be­fore take-off the en­tire team as­sem­bles in front of the hangar and watch­es HA­LO's de­par­ture to­geth­er. How­ev­er, it takes days of plan­ning and prepa­ra­tion to get to this point.
Glob­al change is no se­cret – nei­ther is the an­nu­al Ter­raSAR-X and Tan­DEM-X Sci­ence Meet­ing at DLR Oberp­faf­fen­hofen! High-lev­el ex­perts from all over the world pre­sent­ed the lat­est state of re­search from 21 to 24 Oc­to­ber 2019 and point the way for fu­ture tech­nolo­gies in satel­lite-based re­mote sens­ing. Da­ta source and mu­tu­al start­ing point are the two radar satel­lite mis­sions Ter­raSAR-X and Tan­DEM-X.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


^ "Das DLR in Zahlen und Fakten" (PDF) . German Aerospace Center. 1 September 2017 . Retrieved 25 July 2020 .

^ "Das DLR im Überblick" . DLR Portal . Retrieved 16 June 2019 .

^ "DLR in Zahlen und Fakten" . dlr.de . Retrieved 29 November 2020 .

^ "DLR_School_Lab - The DLR_School_Labsn" . DLR Portal . German Aerospace Center . Retrieved 15 January 2013 .

^ "DLR Portal - Professor Hansjörg Dittus - new DLR Executive Board Member for Space" . DLR Portal . German Aerospace Center. 15 June 2011 . Retrieved 27 June 2011 .

^ "DLR - Prof. Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla appointed Chair of DLR" . dlr.de .

^ Jump up to: a b c "Space flight in Germany – timeline including important events" . 100 Years . German Aerospace Center. 4 February 2007 . Retrieved 26 May 2010 .

^ "DLR site Stuttgart" . DRL Portal . German Aerospace Center. 28 January 2010 . Retrieved 24 May 2010 .

^ "Defense & Security Intelligence & Analysis: IHS Jane's - IHS" . Retrieved 31 December 2016 .

^ "DLR's Bremen Site" . DLR Portal . German Aerospace Center. 28 January 2010 . Retrieved 26 May 2010 .

^ Pearson, Michael; Smith, Matt (21 January 2014). "Comet-chasing probe wakes up, calls home" . CNN . Retrieved 21 January 2014 .

^ "Active Descent System" (PDF) . Moog Inc. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 November 2014 . Retrieved 11 November 2014 .

^ "The MUPUS Instrument for Rosetta mission to comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko" . Laboratorium Mechatroniki i Robotyki Satelitarnej. 2014. Archived from the original on 2 January 2014.

^ Jump up to: a b Rayman, Marc; Fraschetti, Thomas C.; Raymond, Carol A.; Russell, Christopher T. (5 April 2006). "Dawn: A mission in development for exploration of main belt asteroids Vesta and Ceres" (PDF) . Acta Astronautica . 58 (11): 605–616. Bibcode : 2006AcAau..58..605R . doi : 10.1016/j.actaastro.2006.01.014 . Retrieved 14 April 2011 .

^ Jump up to: a b Sierks, H.; Keller, H. U.; Jaumann, R.; Michalik, H.; Behnke, T.; Bubenhagen, F.; Büttner, I.; Carsenty, U.; et al. (2011). "The Dawn Framing Camera". Space Science Reviews . 163 (1–4): 263–327. Bibcode : 2011SSRv..163..263S . doi : 10.1007/s11214-011-9745-4 . S2CID 121046026 .

^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 . Retrieved 26 September 2014 . CS1 maint: archived copy as title ( link )

^ DLR. "RETALT project European reusable launch systems for more sustainability in spaceflight" . DLR Portal . Retrieved 26 June 2019 .

^ "AGILE" . AGILE . Retrieved 13 February 2020 .

^ "AGILE 4.0 – Towards cyber-physical collaborative aircraft development" . Retrieved 13 February 2020 .

^ "Experimental Cockpit" . [ dead link ]

^ "Neues Forschungsflugzeug ISTAR in Braunschweig: DLR übernimmt Falcon 2000LX" . 2 February 2020.

^ "Hydrosol II" . Sixth Framework Programme . CORDIS . 3 November 2009 . Retrieved 26 May 2010 .

^ "DLR scientists achieve solar hydrogen production in a 100-kilowatt pilot plant" . DLR Portal . German Aerospace Center. 25 November 2008 . Retrieved 26 May 2010 .

^ Final technical progress report, for European Union officials (November 2006) Archived 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine

^ "Locations and offices - DLR Portal" . DLR e.V . Retrieved 20 January 2020 .

^ "Small Aircraft Technology - DLR Homepage" . DLR e.V . Retrieved 20 January 2021 .

^ "DLR Augsburg - Zentrum für Leichtbauproduktionstechnik" (in German). DLR e.V . Retrieved 21 December 2014 .

^
"NASA's Journey Above Vesta" . DLR Institute of Planetary Research video with NASA JPL imagery . NASA. 16 September 2011 . Retrieved 18 September 2011 .

^ "Institute of Optical Sensor Systems" . Retrieved 14 February 2018 .

^ "DLR_School_Lab - Bremen" . Retrieved 31 December 2016 .

^ "Institut für Antriebstechnik" . Retrieved 30 August 2013 .

^ "National Experimental Test Center for Unmanned Aircraft Systems - DLR Portal" (in German). DLR e.V . Retrieved 20 January 2021 .

^ "Institute of Low-Carbon Industrial Processes - DLR Homepage" . DLR e.V . Retrieved 20 January 2021 .

^ "Institute of Software Methods for Product Virtualization - DLR Portal" . DLR e.V . Retrieved 20 January 2021 .

^ "Institute of Maritime Energy Systems - DLR Portal" . DLR e.V . Retrieved 20 January 2021 .

^ DLR Website, retrieved 6 February 2012, http://www.dlr.de/dlr/desktopdefault.aspx/tabid-10279/

^ "Neues Institut für Quantentechnologie" .

^ "Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)" . Retrieved 30 August 2013 .

^ "Institut für Lufttransportsysteme" . Institut für Lufttransportsysteme . Retrieved 30 August 2013 .

^ "Institute of Data Science" . Retrieved 14 June 2019 .

^ "Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics" . Retrieved 14 February 2018 .

^ "Institute of System Dynamics and Control" . Retrieved 14 February 2018 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Institute Networked Energy Systems" . Retrieved 18 January 2019 .

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The German Aerospace Center ( German : Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V. , literally German Center for Air- and Space-flight ), abbreviated DLR , is the national center for aerospace, energy and transportation research of Germany . Its headquarters are located in Cologne and it has multiple other locations throughout Germany. The DLR is engaged in a wide range of research and development projects in national and international partnerships. In addition to conducting its own research projects, DLR also acts as the German space agency . As such, it is responsible for planning and implementing the German space programme on behalf of the German federal government . As a project management agency, DLR also coordinates and answers the technical and organisational implementation of projects funded by a number of German federal ministries.

The German Aerospace Center has a national budget of €3.816 billion. [3]

DLR has approximately 8,200 employees at 20 locations in Germany. Its institutes and facilities are spread over 13 sites, as well as offices in Brussels , Paris and Washington, D.C. DLR has a budget of €1 billion to cover its own research, development and operations. Approximately 49% of this sum comes from competitively allocated third-party funds (German: Drittmittel ). In addition to this, DLR administers around €860 million in German funds for the European Space Agency (ESA). In its capacity as project management agency, it manages €1.279 billion in research on behalf of German federal ministries. DLR is a full member of the Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems and a member of the Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres .

In the context of DLR's initiatives to promote young research talent, ten DLR School Labs were set up at Technische Universität Darmstadt , Technische Universität Hamburg-Harburg , RWTH Aachen , Technische Universität Dresden and in Berlin-Adlershof, Braunschweig , Bremen , Cologne-Porz, Dortmund , Göttingen , Lampoldshausen/Stuttgart, Neustrelitz , and Oberpfaffenhofen over the past years. [4] In the DLR School Labs, school pupils can become acquainted with the practical aspects of natural and engineering sciences by conducting interesting experiments.

The members of the DLR executive board are:

On 18 March 2020, Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla was named chair of the DLR executive board, effective 1 October 2020. She will succeed Pascale Ehrenfreund . [6]

The modern DLR was created in 1997, but was the culmination of over half a dozen space, aerospace, and research institutes from across the 20th century.

The oldest predecessor organization of DLR was established by Ludwig Prandtl in Göttingen in 1907. This Modellversuchsanstalt der Motorluftschiff-Studiengesellschaft (MLStG; German for "Institute for Testing of Aerodynamic Models of the Powered Airship Society") later became the Aerodynamische Versuchsanstalt ("Aerodynamics Laboratory" or "Aerodynamic Experimental Station"). In the 1940s the DVL (an AVA sister organization) funded Konrad Zuse 's work on the Z3 and Z4 computers. Another German aviation technolog
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