| Mission type | Space observatory |
|---|---|
| Operator | European Space Agency |
| Spacecraft properties | |
| Power | 115 W[1] |
| Start of mission | |
| Launch date | 2037 (proposed)[2] |
| Rocket | Vega-E[1] (baseline) |
| Orbital parameters | |
| Regime | Low Earth orbit |
| Altitude | 600 km[1] |
| Inclination | 5° (equatorial)[1] |
| Main | |
| Diameter | Infrared: 70 cm;Cassegrain type[1] |
| Wavelengths | Infrared,Gamma-rays andX-rays |
Cosmic Vision M-class ← ARIEL | |
Transient High-Energy Sky and Early Universe Surveyor (THESEUS) is aspace telescope mission proposal by theEuropean Space Agency that would studygamma-ray bursts andX-rays for investigating theearly universe.[1][3] If developed, the mission would investigatestar formation rates andmetallicity evolution, as well as studying the sources and physics ofreionization.
THESEUS is a mission concept that would monitor transient events in the high-energy Universe across the whole sky and over the entirety ofcosmic history. In particular, it expects to make a complete census ofgamma-ray bursts (GRBs) from the Universe's first billion years, to help understand the life cycle of the first stars.[4] THESEUS would provide real-time triggers and accurate locations of the sources, which could also be followed up by other space- or ground-based telescopes operating at complementary wavelengths.
The space observatory would study GRBs andX-rays and their association with the explosive death of massive stars,supernova shock break-outs,black holetidal disruption events, andmagnetar flares. This can provide fundamental information on the cosmic star formation rate, the number density and properties of low-mass galaxies, theneutral hydrogen fraction, and the escape fraction ofultravioletphotons from galaxies.[1]
The concept was selected in May 2018 as a finalist to become the fifth Medium-class mission (M5) of theCosmic Vision programme by theEuropean Space Agency (ESA). The other finalist wasEnVision, a Venus orbiter. The winner,EnVision, was selected in June 2021 for launch in 2031.[5]
In November 2023, following a new selection process (2022) and a Phase-0 study (2023), THESEUS was selected by ESA for a new 2.5 year Phase-A study as one of the three candidates M7 missions under the newVoyage 2050 framework (together with M-Matisse and Plasma Observatory).[6]
The conceptual payload of THESEUS includes:[1]