#CometLanding: Rosetta Mission Success As Humanity Lands On A Comet

Humanity Lands On A Comet
|

The European Space Agency has successfully landed a space probe on the surface of a comet.

The Philae lander softly touched down on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko at 16:05 GMT after a ten-year journey that saw it, and its Rosetta mothership, travel over 6.4 billion kilometres.

A radio signal confirming the landing was received by scientists just after 4pm UK time, after taking almost 30 minutes to travel the 316 million miles distance to Earth.

However the landing was not perfect. ESA said that the anchor harpoons on the lander did not fire, and that it cannot confirm that the lander is stable. While the ice screws on the lander's feet - designed to secure it to the comet - did deploy, there will be concerns that the lander might not stay operational for as long as was hoped:

Despite the issues ESA said that the lander remained operational and in "great shape". It will definitely be able to send back important data and presumably pictures, and remains a historic first.

Jean Jacques Dordain, ESA director general, said:

"Philae has landed… This is a big step for human civilisation. This is science. It makes a difference.

"I would like at this stage to repeat what I say after each success. The biggest problem is that it looks easy… When you know the sum of expertise, dedication, the sum of teamwork between 20 nationalities of member states of Europe… when you know that. You know that this type of success is not coming from the sky. It comes from hard work."

There were scenes of jubilation at the ESA operations centre in Darmstadt, Germany, when the landing was confirmed.

Incredibly the landing was entirely automated, based solely on Philae's own automated systems and some incredibly complex pre-programming.

The landing process started at around 9am GMT when Philae separated from the Rosetta spacecraft. It then began its slow and graceful descent down to the surface.

About the size of a dishwasher, the Philae lander anchored itself onto the surface using a combination of drills built into the landing gear as well as harpoons which were intended to fire into the ground and secure it.

Philae was travelling at just 1 metre/second when it landed, with the craft's three-legged landing gear absorbing the impact to prevent rebound. An ice screw in each foot was drilled into the surface. It was hoped that a thruster on top would be used to make sure it did not fly back into space along with the harpoons but neither worked.

Regardless, the lander did make it to the comet - and celebrated in the only way a robot knows how - bantering with William Shatner:

The reaction from the world of space was immediate and overwhelming.

"After more than 10 years travelling through space, we're now making the best ever scientific analysis of one of the oldest remnants of our Solar System," says Alvaro Giménez, ESA's Director of Science and Robotic Exploration.

"Decades of preparation have paved the way for today's success, ensuring that Rosetta continues to be a game-changer in cometary science and space exploration."

Rosetta: A Visual History
At first it was just a model...(01 of19)
Open Image Modal
Seen here with European Space Agency Director of Science Prof Roger Bonnet in 2003. (credit:Matthew Fearn/PA Archive)
And then they built it for real.(02 of19)
Open Image Modal
Workers are seen at spacecraft Rosetta with thermal blankets during testing in the Large Space Simulator in the Netherlands in 2004. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Preparing for launch,(03 of19)
Open Image Modal
The European Ariane V rocket, carrying spacecraft Rosetta, stands at its launching pad at the Kourou space base, French Guiana, Wednesday Feb. 25, 2004. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
The Launch.(04 of19)
Open Image Modal
On the 2 March 2004 Rosetta started its 10 year mission, launching from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.
And it left us behind.(05 of19)
Open Image Modal
This handout picture from the European Space Agency (ESA) retrieved on September 3, 2008 shows an artist's rendition of ESA's probe Rosetta leaving Earth. (credit:Getty Images)
This was the target.(06 of19)
Open Image Modal
This rather daunting image shows the size of the comet, providing some perspective of the titanic task that ESA is facing.
It's big.(07 of19)
Open Image Modal
(08 of19)
Open Image Modal
Artist's impression of the European Space Agency (ESA) probe Rosetta with Mars in the background. It also passed by Jupiter, slingshotting around the planet to gain speed in order to catch up with Comet 67P. (credit:Getty Images)
The comet came closer...(09 of19)
Open Image Modal
(credit:APN)
(10 of19)
Open Image Modal
Taken at a distance of around 110km this image was taken in August 2014 and shows on of the clearest images yet of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
(11 of19)
Open Image Modal
The image shows the spectacular region of activity at the 'neck' of 67P/C-G. This is the product of ices sublimating and gases escaping from inside the comet, carrying streams of dust out into space.
Rosetta 'Selfie'(12 of19)
Open Image Modal
This incredible double exposure image was taken at just 16km. In the foreground you can see one of Rosetta's large 14m solar wings while in the background is the comet itself.
(13 of19)
Open Image Modal
Rosetta OSIRIS wide-angle camera image of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko shows the extensive activity taking place at the 'neck' of the comet.
It picked its landing site.(14 of19)
Open Image Modal
This small, unassuming patch of ground is where the ESA hopes to make history by being the first organisation to land on a comet. The photo is a collage of different images taken from around 30km.
And now?(15 of19)
Open Image Modal
This image provided by the European Space Agency ESA shows an artists impression of the Rosetta orbiter deploying the Philae lander to comet 67P/ChuryumovGerasimenko (credit:AP)
How Will It Land?(16 of19)
Open Image Modal
To help avoid any unnecessary complications the ESA is taking no chances. Once the thruster pushes Philae onto the comet's surface foot screws will immediately lock the lander down while tiny Harpoons will shoot down, essentially 'anchoring' the tiny lander.
Exploring A Comet(17 of19)
Open Image Modal
Undated artistic sketch of Philae on the comet. (credit:Getty Images)
And now we wait.(18 of19)
Open Image Modal
Employees work in the control room of ESA in Darmstadt, Germany. (credit:AP)
(19 of19)
Open Image Modal
The picture taken with the navigation camera on Rosetta and released by the European Space Agency ESA shows the boulder-strewn neck region of Comet 67P/ChuryumovâGerasimenko, with the smaller lobe on the left and the larger lobe on the right. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Rosetta was launched on 2 March 2004 and journeyed from Mars to Jupiter and across the Solar System until it arrived in orbit around the comet on 6 August 2014.

The landing site was chosen just six weeks before the landing date, because it was impossible to see the terrain in enough detail until the probe was physically above the comet.

The chosen site, named Agilkia, was named after an island which is now home to the Philae temple ruins in Egypt.

"One of the greatest uncertainties associated with the delivery of the lander was the position of Rosetta at the time of deployment, which was influenced by the activity of the comet at that specific moment, and which in turn could also have affected the lander's descent trajectory," says Sylvain Lodiot, ESA Rosetta Spacecraft Operations Manager.

"Furthermore, we're performing these operations in an environment that we've only just started learning about, 510 million kilometres from Earth."

Stephan Ulamec, Philae Lander Manager at the DLR German Aerospace Center, said:

"We are extremely relieved to be safely on the surface of the comet, especially given the extra challenge of the comet's unusual shape and unexpectedly hazardous surface.

"In the next hours we'll learn exactly where and how we've landed, and we'll start getting as much science as we can from the surface of this fascinating world."