ATHENA will replace the current telescope generation (XMM-Newton, Chandra) and will then be the most sensitive X-ray telescope in the world. The task is to observe the sky in the energy range of 200 eV to 15 keV and to contribute to the elucidation of the questions "How has matter come together in the visible structures of the universe today" and "How do black holes grow and how do they influence the universe?"
A central object of research is the formation and evolution of galaxy groups and clusters in the universe, investigating the feedback effect of active galactic nuclei and the chemical development of hot baryons. Another current topic that ATHENA will make easy to follow due to its high sensitivity is the growth of black holes on all size scales.
ATHENA will above all be a very versatile instrument and available to a very broad research community, so that scientific topics from many areas of astrophysics can be addressed.