Conference Scope, Organizers and Key Dates

Conference Venue and Accomodation

Conference Program and Abstracts

Conference Presenter Information

Conference Registration

All participants, travelling to Paris or connecting remotely, must register before Monday, 3 February 2020 18:00 CET (UTC+1). Please register using the online Registration Form here. 

You are warmly invited to join the first international conference to discuss the scientific investigations of the EnVision mission at CNES headquarters in central Paris, France from 12-14 February 2020. The conference will welcome aux presentations related to the mission’s payload and its science investigations. For more information, <click here>.


Why Venus ?

Venus exploration presents clear opportunities to address fundamental questions about the evolution of terrestrial planets and the appearance of life within our own solar system. Comparing the interior, surface and atmosphere evolution of Earth and Venus is essential to understanding what internal processes drove habitability of our own planet.. This is particularly true in an era where we expect hundreds, and then thousands, of terrestrial exoplanets to be discovered. 

EnVision is a proposed orbiter mission aiming at determining the level and nature of the geological activity and the sequence of events that generated the surface features of Venus, assessing whether Venus once had oceans (and was thus perhaps hospitable for life) and understanding the geodynamics framework that controls the release of internal heat over Venus ’ history. EnVision will use a number of different techniques to search for active geological processes, measure changes in surface temperature associated with active volcanism, characterise regional and local geological features, determine crustal support mechanisms and constrain mantle and core properties. 

The mission would be launched on an Ariane 6.2 in 2032, arriving at Venus after a five month cruise, to perform 4 years of measurements with 5 cutting-edge instruments : an S-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (VenSAR), a Subsurface Radar Sounder (SRS) and VenSpec, a suite of three spectrometers and spectro-imagers : VenSpec-M (Infrared Imager), VenSpec-H (IR spectrometer), and VenSpec-U (UV spectrometer). Envision will also characterise the gravity field of Venus thanks to a Radio Science Experiment.

The mission is currently in its concept phase for a selection expected in 2021. EnVision would be an European Space Agency (ESA) mission, with a significant contribution and potential sharing of responsibilities with the United States’ National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) currently under scientific, technical and programmatic assessment. It is one of three mission concepts competing for an opportunity to launch in 2032

“Please explore our menus & follow the links above to find more about Venus and the EnVision project !’


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