Background
The project builds upon previous GNSS reflectometry satellite missions—the CYGNSS constellation by NASA and the TechDemoSat-1 demonstrator by ESA and UKSA. Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., the prime contractor for HydroGNSS, was involved in both these missions.[11]
HydroGNSS is launching as the first mission of ESA's Scout series of missions, within the FutureEO programme, although it bears the designation Scout-2.[2] That is because the Scout-1 mission CubeMAP was cancelled before its launch due to budgetary constraints.[12][13] ESA requires each Scout mission to move to launch within three years after kick-off and with a budget under €35 million.[14]
Project history
In March 2021, ESA has decided to implement HydroGNSS as the second of its new Scout series of missions within the FutureEO programme.[15] In October 2021, ESA has signed a contract with Surrey Satellite Technology to build the mission.[16][17] In March 2023, ESA has decided to build two HydroGNSS satellites instead of just one.[18][19]
In August 2025, the two satellites have passed their Flight Acceptance Review.[20] In September 2025, the two satellites have been transported to California for launch on Falcon 9 later that year.[21][11] After testing, propellant loading, battery charging, and launch adapter integration, the two spacecraft were pronounced ready for launch by ESA in November 2025.[14]
The two satellites were launched on 28 November 2025 at 18:44 UTC from Vandenberg Space Force Base on the SpaceX Falcon 9 Transporter-15 rideshare mission[22][23][14][24][10] and separated from the rocket less than 90 minutes after liftoff. At 21:45 UTC, Surrey Satellite Technology confirmed that they had received first signals from the satellites.[9]
On 19 December 2025, SSTL reported that both HydroGNSS satellites were already collecting Delay Doppler Maps of reflected GNSS signals. One example dataset was collected by HydroGNSS 2 over Central Africa on 5 December 2025, 7 days after launch.[25] In March 2026, SSTL reported that the two spacecraft, still in their commissioning phase, were successfully collecting "promising early measurements" and published a video of the mission's Delay Doppler Maps generated over France, the Mediterranean Sea, and north and east Africa.[26]