Probe set for ‘magical’ landing on comet

This photo released by the European Space Agency on December 20, 2013 shows an artist's impression of Rosetta's lander Philae (back view) on the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. AFP PHOTO / ESA MEDIALAB

This photo released by the European Space Agency on December 20, 2013 shows an artist's impression of Rosetta's lander Philae (back view) on the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. AFP PHOTO / ESA MEDIALAB

Published Nov 11, 2014

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Paris - European scientists are gearing for the culmination of two decades' work and a 1.3-billion-euro ($1.6-billion) bet with the first-ever landing on a comet on Wednesday.

In an operation fraught with peril, an unmanned science lab called Philae will detach from the European Space Agency (ESA) scout Rosetta and descend to a comet 510 million kilometres from Earth.

If all goes well, the 100-kilo probe will harpoon itself to the surface of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

It will then carry out experiments that, astrophysicists hope, could be a landmark in understanding the solar system and the origins of life on Earth.

“Rosetta spacecraft in excellent shape,” ESA tweeted on Tuesday. “Target locked!”

In 1993, when the Rosetta mission was approved, the Internet did not exist, Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin were in government and the hit movie of the year was “Jurassic Park”.

Riding piggyback on Rosetta on a 10-year trek across the solar system, Philae has travelled more than six billion kilometres to make its historic rendezvous - spending 957 days of its journey in hibernation.

Mission controllers at Darmstadt, Germany, face a series of four “go/no-go” assessments before giving the final command to let the little explorer detach from her mothership.

Darmstadt should receive confirmation of the separation at 0903 GMT on Wednesday.

For veterans of this marathon mission, it will be like the severing of an umbilical cord.

“It's going to be a rather magical moment,” said Sylvain Lodiot, ESA flight manager.

Over the following seven hours, the probe will ever-so-gently descend over 20 kilometres to the surface of the four-kilometre-long comet.

It will aim for a landing site called Agilkia, an egg-shaped spot measuring just 900 metres long by 600 metres wide.

It is deemed to be the least hazardous place on a comet studded with rocks and gashed by ravines and cliffs as high as houses - a nightmare for a fragile lander.

Philae will land at 3.5 kilometres per hour, firing two harpoons into a surface the engineers fervently hope will provide grip.

Ice screws at the end of its three gangly feet will then be driven into the comet, to prevent the labs drifting off into space from an object with negligible gravity.

The size and heft of a refrigerator back on Earth, Philae will weigh just one gram - or less than a feather - on “67P”.

 

Comets

For millennia, comets have been a source of fear and awe.

“The celestial phenomena called comets (excite) wars, heated and turbulent dispositions in the atmosphere, and in the constitutions of men, with all their evil consequences,” warned the first-century Egyptian astronomer and astrologer Ptolemy.

Scientists, though, see them differently.

To them, comets are bodies of ice and dust - the ancient, primordial material left over from the building of the Solar System.

Doomed to orbit the Sun, the comets warm as they approach our star, causing a fount of gases to escape from their head, and leaving a trail of ice particles which are dramatically reflected in sunlight.

Some experts believe comets may have helped to sow life on Earth itself.

According to this theory, comets pounded the fledgling Earth 4.6 billion years ago, providing it with complex organic carbon molecules and precious water.

Rosetta has already sent home fascinating data on the comet, but Philae will provide the first on-the-ground assessment, using 10 instruments to study the comet's physical and chemical composition.

Like Rosetta, it will wield a mass spectrometer, a high-tech tool to analyse a sample's chemical signature, aimed at drawing up a complete carbon inventory.

A showstopper find would be molecules known as left-handed amino acids, “the 'bricks' with which all proteins on Earth are built,” says ESA. - AFP

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