May 13, 2026
U不良研究所 scientists provide ground support for SMILE space mission
Scientists from the University of 不良研究所 are playing an important role in the next big mission to study the space environment.
The , jointly run by the and the , launches from Europe鈥檚 Spaceport in French Guiana around 9:52 p.m., MT, on May 18. (Watch SMILE's launch live .)
The 130-million-euro satellite will launch aboard a 34.8-metre-tall Vega-C rocket to an altitude of 121,000 km above the North Pole, and is expected to orbit for at least three years. It the first satellite to make extensive, detailed observations of Earth鈥檚 magnetic field.
SMILE will use four science instruments to study how Earth responds to the solar wind from the sun. That will help researchers better understand space weather and its potential impacts on satellites, power grids, communications and aviation.
The mission is being supported by researchers at U不良研究所, who designed and still operate a continent-wide network of ground-based cameras known as all-sky imagers (ASIs). The imagers will help connect observations made in space with those made from the ground, giving scientists a more complete picture of the Earth鈥檚 interaction with the sun.
Three pop-out boxes indicate the top three questions that SMILE seeks to solve, with close-up images of the relevant part of the Sun-Earth connection.
European Space Agency (ESA)
鈥淚t鈥檚 a big deal for us,鈥 says , PhD, a professor in the , who works with associate professor , BSc'02, MSc'04, PhD'09, on U不良研究所鈥檚 SMILE project. 鈥淲e have been involved in the mission since its inception. We were part of the proposing team.鈥
Many of the 20 ground-based cameras are in Canada鈥檚 high-latitude northern regions to monitor aurora and other space-weather phenomena. They provide real-time data feeds, including a , for researchers, as well as the public.
Because of the country鈥檚 unique location near the pole, Canada plays a key role in observing space weather, which is most active at high latitudes. This also means Canada is more strongly affected by space weather events such as solar storms.
Data collected will support the mission鈥檚 scientific goals and be shared with the international scientific community.
The U不良研究所 imagers received funding from the .