What's new

Comet hunter Rosetta arrives at target

Open in new tab for hi res

Comet_on_18_October_b_NavCam.jpg


Detected molecules so far:

Water (H2O)
Carbon monoxide (CO)
Carbon dioxide (CO2)
Ammonia (NH3)
Methane (CH4)
Methanol (CH3OH)
Formaldehyde (CH2O)
Hydrogen sulphide (H2S)
Hydrogen cyanide (HCN)
Sulphur dioxide (SO2)
Carbon disulphide (CS2)

The ‘perfume’ of 67P/C-G | Rosetta - ESA's comet chaser
 
.
Comet smells like rotten eggs, horse urine, alcohol, bitter almonds, vinegar: scientists
Updated 37 minutes ago, Thu 23 Oct 2014, 8:50pm

PHOTO: Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko as captured by navigation camera on the ESA's Rosetta spacecraft.(ESA/Rosetta/NAVCAM)
MAP: European Union
Rotten eggs, horse urine, alcohol, and bitter almonds: this is the bouquet of odours you would smell if a comet in deep space could be brought back to Earth, European scientists say.

An instrument aboard the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft has detected some intriguing chemical signatures from Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P/C-G) since their rendezvous in deep space in August, the scientists said.

Molecules detected include ammonia, methane, hydrogen sulphide, hydrogen cyanide and formaldehyde.

"If you could smell the comet, you [would] probably wish that you hadn't," said the team wryly in a blog posted on the European Space Agency (ESA) website.

The device, called Rosina-DFMS, is a mass spectrometer.

It has been analysing the signature of gas given off by the "coma" - the comet's head, as it heads towards the Sun.

"The perfume of 67P/C-G is quite strong," said Kathrin Altwegg, Rosina's chief scientist.

If you could smell the comet, you probably wish that you hadn't

European Space Agency scientists


"With the odour of rotten eggs (hydrogen sulphide), horse stable (ammonia), and the pungent, suffocating odour of formaldehyde, this is mixed with the faint, bitter, almond-like aroma of hydrogen cyanide.

"Add some whiff of alcohol (methanol) to this mixture, paired with the vinegar-like aroma of sulphur dioxide and a hint of the sweet aromatic scent of carbon disulphide, and you arrive at the 'perfume' of our comet."

The detection of so many different molecules at this stage has been a surprise, the ESA said.

The Rosina team believed only the most volatile molecules, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide, would be released as the comet's icy surface started slowly to warm.

On a six-and-a-half-year orbit, 67P/C-G is the target of an ambitious mission to shed light on the origins of comets, ancient travellers of the Solar System.

Rosetta caught up with it after a 6 billion kilometre trek that required four flybys of Earth and Mars, using the gravity of each planet as a slingshot to build up speed.

It is now in close orbit around the comet at a distance of around 400 million kilometres from the Sun.

The scout will send down a robot lander on November 12 to carry out on-the-spot scientific tests.

On August 13 next year the comet and Rosetta will be 185 million kilometres from the Sun, their closest approach to our star.

Comet smells like rotten eggs, horse urine, alcohol, bitter almonds, vinegar: scientists - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
 
.
I have entered a competition on naming the landing site! Hope i win and get selected for a live view of descent in ESA control center! :bounce:
 
.
I have entered a competition on naming the landing site! Hope i win and get selected for a live view of descent in ESA control center! :bounce:

What name did you suggest? Maybe I will suggest: "Camp Truth"
 
.
Film funded by ESA tells the story of comet-chasing spacecraft Rosetta
Ambition, a short science fiction film premiered at the British Film Institute, is a positive use of the space agency’s PR funding


0353cdbb-dd47-4d06-9a4a-6857c78d7b7f-620x372.jpeg

Ambition is a science fiction short film that explores the motivations behind ESA’s Rosetta mission. Photograph: ESA
Stuart Clark

Tuesday 28 October 201412.58 EDT

The European Space Agency has become a film company. This is how the short science fiction film Ambition was announced at its premiere on Friday 24 October. Funded by ESA, it is a collaboration between the space agency and digital film company Platige Image.

Oscar-nominated director Tomek Bagiński’s seven minute film explores the philosophy behind the Rosetta mission. It also includes some eye-popping special effects. These include a breath-taking scene in which Rosetta deploys the Philae lander, while the comet rotates to bring the jets into view.

This is an inspiring and imaginative use of outreach funding. In my experience most people want to be entertained rather than educated. So the more real science that can be seamlessly woven into entertainment, the better.

If the film doesn’t quite work as a complete story because of its brevity, that’s ok says Mark McCaughrean, Senior Science Advisor at ESA, “Think of it as a 7-minute trailer to a 20 year mission.”

The Rosetta mission is turning science fiction into science fact by being the first spacecraft to orbit a comet. So, why not the other way around? Ambition features two post-humans discussing the ‘ancient mission’ while conjuring visions using only their minds.

Science is as much a cultural endeavour as film making. By funding film makers, ESA are making a bold statement about where space exploration should be in our society, which is in its very heart and soul.

Ambition stars Aiden Gillen and Aisling Franciosi, and was shot on location in Iceland. You can watch the film below.

Film funded by ESA tells the story of comet-chasing spacecraft Rosetta | Science | The Guardian
 
.
On Friday (Oct. 31), the European Rosetta mission carried out its second and final ‘deterministic’ maneuver that put the satellite into its planned lander delivery orbit.

At a distance of 30 kilometers (19 miles) from Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, Rosetta will hold steady until Nov. 12 when it releases the small Philae lander to the comet’s surface.

The thruster burn lasted 90 seconds and, according to a Rosetta blog update, it changed the probe’s speed by 9.3 centimeters per second, pushing it further away from the comet’s nucleus. The Rosetta Flight Dynamics team confirmed that the mission was now ready to drop Philae in 10 days time.

The blog update noted that the “mission control team at ESOC (European Space Operations Center in Germany) expect to conduct some additional, minor ‘touch-up’ burns between now and then just to maintain Rosetta on this orbit (but) these will not significantly change the orbit.”

Rosetta was in a compact, 10 kilometer (6 mile) orbit around Churyumov-Gerasimenko, but this wider orbit is necessary until 2 hours before Philae separates from Rosetta. At that time, another thruster burn will push the satellite back toward the comet until Philae separation occurs at around 22 kilometers (14 miles) from the dusty surface.

This maneuver will also result in Rosetta making a close approach of only 5 kilometers (3 miles) from comet after Philae is released. The spacecraft will then optimize its position 40 minutes after separation so it can guarantee visibility of Philae at touchdown.

The mindbogglingly complex series of orbital corrections are described in this ESA animation:

Landing Philae on Churyumov-Gerasimenko will be the first time in history that a robotic lander will make a soft touchdown on a cometary body. In September, mission scientists announced that site “J” would be the landing spot for Philae, located on the comet’s small lobe. But a successful landing is not assured; engineers have placed odds of success at 70 percent.

After holding a competition to name site “J”, Rosetta’s official Twitter feed announced that judges needed another day to select a winning nomination. The official decision will therefore be announced on Tuesday (Nov. 4).
 
. . .
What name did you suggest? Maybe I will suggest: "Camp Truth"

What did you propose?

I think Site J should be named: Landing Site Juno Beach

Because: I think this name best symbolizes human nature and it's will and eventual necessity to colonize space.
Just like how allied troops were forced to land in Normandy, so humans will be forced to land elsewhere in the solar system and in my opinion choosing such a symbolic and well known name can only benefit ESA and it's mission.
Different associations:
-ESA chose 5 candidate sites to land, there were 5 sites selected for landing on D-day
-it fits with landing spot "J"
-Juno beach was in Europe
-Normandy invasion marked a turning point in the war, just like how Rosetta will mark a turning point in our understanding of asteroids/comets
-Philae will have to "assault" Choryumov-Gerasimenko, just like how allied troops had to assault that beach and make a beach head-similarly, Philae will have to keep clinging to the comet just like the troops clinged to the beach
-hopefully, the name won't be too extensively associated with military expansion or military utilization of space, but more with above mentioned human will and need.
-mission is D-day for ESA, one of the first really big ticket missions that capture imagination and motivate youngsters


Many thanks for your consideration and best of luck for the landing! :D
 
.
Rosetta mission live on Eutelsat 7B

NOVEMBER 10, 2014 08.34 EUROPE/LONDON BY ROBERT BRIEL



The Rosetta landing will be broadcast live on Eutelsat 7B in HD this week.

The Eutelsat 7B satellite is part of an exceptional infrastructure put in place by ESA to share the historic landing of the Philae lander on Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko on Wednesday, November12.

ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft arrived at Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko on August 6 after a ten-year journey through the Solar System. The landing site, currently known as Site J and located on the smaller of the comet’s two ‘lobes’, was selected just six weeks after Rosetta arrived at the comet.

The mission’s lander, Philae, will separate from the Rosetta spacecraft on November 12 at 08:35 GMT (09:35 CET) from a distance of 22.5 km from the centre of the comet. It will land about seven hours later, with confirmation expected to arrive at Earth at around 16:00 GMT (17:00 CET).

Three control centres are involved in the landing: the Rosetta Mission Operations Centre at ESA’s Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany; the Lander Control Centre at DLR in Cologne, Germany; and the Lander Science Operations and Navigation Centre at CNES in Toulouse, France. Activities at each control centre will be closely linked and will be featured in a combined English-language ESA TV programme broadcast from ESOC.

Viewers across Europe can watch the climax to the Rosetta mission via the Eutelsat 7B satellite located at 7 degrees East on 12676.83MHz/V; symbol rate: 7200 FEC: 5/6 Mod: DVBS2/8PSK

The Rosetta mission schedule is as follows:

Tuesday, November 1119:00 GMT / 20:00 CET Go-No Go #1

Wedensday, November 1206:00-07:00 GMT / 07:00-08:00 CET: Final preparation manoeuvre and Go/No-Go # 5 for lander separation
08:30-09:15 GMT / 09:30-10:15 CET: Lander separation scheduled at 09:03 GMT/10:03 CET
11:00-12:15 GMT / 12:00-13:15 CET: Science update and first pictures expected around 12:00 GMT / 13:00 CET
14:00-15:30 GMT/ 15:00-16:30 CET: Rosetta science / Last preparations and then await landing
15:45-16:15 GMT /16:45-17:15 CET: Landing expected at 16:00 GMT / 17:00 CET (+/- 15 mn)
17:00 GMT /18:00 CET earliest: Presentation of first panoramic image from the comet
 
. .
Rosetta mission: setback as landing probe fails to respond initially

The Rosetta spacecraft has been chasing comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko since 2004 and is due to release its lander on Tuesday

By Sarah Knapton, Science Editor

A last-minute glitch in the 10-year mission of the Rosetta spacecraft has ensured a nerve-shredding experience for scientists when they try to land it on a comet.

Rosetta’s Philae landing module did not power up properly when its controllers at the European Space Agency switched it on for the first time on Tuesday, causing concern about whether it will work during the landing attempt.

Since it was launched in 2004, Rosetta has travelled four billion miles in its quest to find out, among other things, whether comets could have sparked life on Earth.

If the probe is successfully brought down on the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, it will test samples for amino acids, which could show that similar comets “seeded” Earth with the chemicals needed for life.

If all goes to plan, the Philae probe will detach from Rosetta at 9.03am on Wednesday, with touchdown scheduled for 4.02pm.

Matt Taylor, a Rosetta project scientist, said: “We had a hiccup when we first powered it up. There was a little bit of a delay with it coming online. We don’t know what caused it and we are seeking to find out the cause.

“Obviously it’s a concern for the next step. But everything appears to be working OK now so we’re keeping our fingers crossed.”

Scientists said that the craft was on the right orbit, and the Twitter feed for Philae announced that it was “definitely” warmed up after the early glitches.

Comets throughout history have been associated with ill omen; harbingers of doom which streaked across the skies foretelling plague, death and apocalypse.

But the Rosetta mission could prove that they are actually responsible for all of life on Earth — and possibly life beyond it as well.

The scientists will be particularly excited if they find “left-handed” amino acids — so-called because they have mirror image “right-handed” forms — as those are the type which make up most of life on Earth.

Finding them on a comet would not only give the strongest indication yet that we have alien ancestry, but it would show that Earth-like life could exist on other planets.

John Plane, professor of atmospheric chemistry at the University of Leeds, said: “It’s hugely exciting. One of the great mysteries is whether life came from comets. And if these 'left-handed’ amino acids are found, then clearly these comets will be seeding other planets as well.

“We will be able to look in great detail at what is in the ice.”

There is also a theory that the icy comets brought huge amounts of water to Earth during a period of intense bombardment 4 billion years ago.





Prof Stanley Cowley, of the University of Leicester’s department of physics and astronomy, said: “Comets represent bodies which were left over, essentially unprocessed, from the formation of the solar system some 4.5  billion years ago.

“It is therefore an interesting relic from that otherwise inaccessible epoch.

“Comet impacts are thought to have been one of the principal means by which water was delivered to the early Earth, possibly contributing half the water in our oceans.”

The comet is orbiting at 34,000 miles per hour. It is 360 million miles away from Earth, about half way between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

The surface is a jumble of cliffs, boulders and steep slopes. If Philae is released when Rosetta is just a centimetre out of alignment, the lander could fall hundreds of metres away from the chosen touchdown spot.

On Tuesday night, the European Space Agency website said that Rosetta was on course to deliver the probe on the correct trajectory, thus completing the first “critical moment” of the landing.

Dr Daniel Brown, an astronomy lecturer at Nottingham Trent University, said: “Although we have landed on planets, moons and asteroids, it has never been attempted for a nucleus of a comet, and with good reason.

“These objects have a very low gravity, are loosely composed of ice, dust and rocks, and are very irregular in shape. They are temperamental in their behaviour and notoriously difficult to predict.”

The probe is expected to land and fix itself to the two-mile-long comet using harpoons and drills.

It will then begin to analyse the ice, organic material and chemicals present in the comet’s nucleus, and later, as it gets closer to the Sun and begins to heat up, the emissions of gases such as carbon dioxide.

Prof Alan Fitzsimmons from the astrophysics research centre at Queen’s University, Belfast, and colleagues have spent more than a decade studying comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and measuring its properties. “We have waited over 10 years for this day, but with the comet being over 317 million miles away, all we can do now is cross our fingers and hope,” he said.

“The Rosetta mission realises the ambition of mankind to explore our origins and discover what is out there.”

The distance between Earth and the comet means that mission control will not find out whether the landing has been a success for 28 minutes and 20 seconds due to the amount of time it will take the radio waves to travel and transmit the data.

While Philae is on the surface, Rosetta will continue flying in formation with the comet at a distance of about 18 miles.

Rosetta has already been travelling for more than a decade. The craft was launched on March 2, 2004, from Kourou, French Guiana.

It is named after the Rosetta Stone, which provided the key to deciphering hieroglyphics. Scientists hope the spacecraft will provide a similar breakthrough in our understanding of the past.

The Philae probe is named after the island in the Nile where an obelisk was found which also displayed inscriptions in two ancient languages and helped with deciphering the Rosetta Stone.

Rosetta mission: setback as landing probe fails to respond initially - Telegraph
 
.
Separation confirmed. 3 more hours from the time this post was posted until landing¨!

12 November 2014 The Philae lander has separated from the Rosetta orbiter, and is now on its way to becoming the first spacecraft to touch down on a comet.

Separation was confirmed at ESA’s Space Operation Centre, ESOC, in Darmstadt, Germany at 09:03 GMT / 10:03 CET. It takes the radio signals from the transmitter on Rosetta 28 minutes and 20 seconds to reach Earth, so separation actually occurred in space at 08:35 GMT / 09:35 CET.

Rosetta and Philae separation confirmed / Rosetta / Space Science / Our Activities / ESA
 
.
.
Philae probe has landed and is sending back telemetry!!!!
 
.
Back
Top Bottom