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IRON AND ICE
Final checks for first-ever comet landing
by Staff Writers
Darmstadt, Germany (AFP) Nov 11, 2014


Comet landing: The interminable seven-hour descent
Paris (AFP) Nov 11, 2014 - Ground controllers face a nail-biting, seven-hour wait Wednesday between robot lab Philae separating from Rosetta, its orbiting mother craft, and making its historic touchdown on a comet.

And given the distance from Earth, they will have to wait 28 minutes and 20 seconds for the signal to arrive that everything ultimately went well... or not.

Here is a timeline of Philae's planned descent:

Tuesday November 11:

- 1930 GMT: First "go/no-go" signal is given after a critical systems check to confirm Rosetta is on the correct trajectory to set down its precious payload.

- Midnight GMT: Second "go/no-go" confirms that the instructions for Philae's separation from Rosetta, and its landing on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, have been correctly uploaded. Rosetta is ready.

Wednesday November 12:

- 0135 GMT: Third "go/no-go" to confirm the health and status of Philae. The robot is now ready for landing.

- 0603 GMT: Rosetta performs the final pre-delivery manoeuvre to place it on the correct trajectory at a distance of 22.5 kilometres (14 miles) from the comet's centre.

- About 0635 GMT to 0735 GMT: The final "go/no-go" decision on lander separation -- the final verification that Rosetta, Philae, the orbit, the ground stations, ground systems and the teams are ready for touchdown.

- 0835 GMT: Philae must self-eject from Rosetta to start its seven-hour descent to the comet.

- 0903 GMT: If all has gone well, the signal from Rosetta to confirm Philae has separated should arrive on Earth.

- 1053 GMT: The first signal from Philae, sent via Rosetta, are scheduled to arrive on Earth. This will indicate that the two craft have successfully established a communications link.

- Around 1534 GMT: Philae lands on 67P.

- About 1602 GMT, with a one-hour window: The signal confirming touchdown arrives on Earth -- ending an anxious wait for ground controllers four times longer than the so-called "seven minutes of terror" it took for the signal from the rover Curiosity to arrive after it landed on Mars in 2012.

- Philae is meant to obtain and transmit the first images of 67P's surface almost immediately after landing, and get started on its science experiments for a mission of at least one week.

First hurdle cleared in checks for comet landing
Darmstadt, Germany (AFP) Nov 11, 2014 - Final preparations for Wednesday's historic landing on a comet were on track after clearing a crucial systems check, the European Space Agency (ESA) said late Tuesday.

Flight managers gave their OK to the first in four checks that must be carried out before the probe Philae can descend from its orbiter craft onto a comet in deep space, it said.

"We got the first go, the first go-ahead," an ESA spokeswoman said at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany.

"The satellite is in perfect orbit."

Three other "go/no-go" evaluations lie ahead in the coming hours before the landing attempt can be authorised.

Philae is a 100-kilo (220-pound) science lab that has been piggybacking on its mothership Rosetta since the pair were launched more than a decade ago.

It is designed to detach from Rosetta and land gently on 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, a comet that is now more than half a billion kilometres (310 million miles) from Earth and racing towards the Sun.

Astrophysicists hope Philae will survive the perilous descent and use its kit of 10 instruments to analyse the comet's ice and dust -- the primeval remnants of the material that built the Solar System some 4.6 billion years ago.

The outcome could confirm, or demolish, a theory that comets pounded Earth in its infancy, bringing it water that became the oceans and carbon molecules that were the building blocks of life.

Scientists were going through a final systems checklist Tuesday for the first-ever landing on a comet, the culmination of a dream to explore the origins of the Solar System.

Mission control in Darmstadt, Germany, gave the green light to the first in four "go/no-go" decisions on whether to press ahead with Wednesday's high-risk operation, or abort.

"We got the first go, the first go-ahead," a European Space Agency (ESA) spokeswoman said.

Carried by the orbiter Rosetta, the probe Philae is a 100-kilo (220-pound) lander carrying 10 instruments for the first-ever boots-on-the ground analysis of a comet.

Astrophysicists hope Philae will unlock knowledge about the origins of the Solar System and even life on Earth.

The robot lab has travelled 6.5 billion kilometres (four billion miles) on its mothership since the pair were launched more than a decade ago.

But its solo voyage of about 20km will be the most perilous part.

That is the distance to Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko that Philae must cover after separation, scheduled for 0835 GMT on Wednesday.

Touchdown will take place about seven hours later, with a confirmation signal expected on Earth at about 1600 GMT.

For all this to happen, Rosetta first has to perform a high-precision ballet, more than 500 million km from home.

Philae has no thrusters, which means Rosetta must eject it when the velocity and trajectory are exactly right.

A tiny inaccuracy means any error in its course will widen during the descent -- the probe could miss its 900 x 600 metre (3,000 x 2,000 foot) landing site and smash into rocks or cliffs nearby.

"Failure is not an option," Philae scientist Jean-Pierre Bibring of the Paris-Sud University in France said Monday.

Early Wednesday, Rosetta will swerve inwards towards the comet and burn its thrusters, the final pre-ejection manoeuvre.

Scant time will be available to verify the calculations are right before the "go" for separation is given.

Adding to the tension is the unknown surface of Comet "67P". It could be tough or brittle, soft or crumbly.

- Fridge or feather -

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

Ice screws at the end of its three gangly legs will then be driven into the comet, while a gas thruster on the top of the probe goes into action to prevent the lab bouncing back into space.

The size and heft of a refrigerator back on Earth, Philae will weigh just one gramme (0.04 of an ounce) -- or less than a feather -- on the comet.

One of the most complex and ambitious unmanned programmes in space history, the 1.3-billion-euro ($1.6-billion) Rosetta mission was approved back in 1993.

It took a decade to design and build, and after its launch, another decade to catch up with the comet, using the gravity of Earth and Mars as slingshots with which to build up speed.

Philae accounts for about a fifth of the haul of scientific data expected from the mission in its entirety.

If Wednesday's landing is called off, the team will have another chance in about two weeks when Rosetta and her payload are at the same point in orbit, according to Paolo Ferri, head of missions operations.

Comets are believed to be primordial ice and carbon dust left over from the building of the Solar System.

They are doomed to circle the Sun in orbits that can range from a few years to millennia.

According to a leading theory, comets pounded the fledgling Earth 4.6 billion years ago, providing it with carbon molecules and precious water -- part of the tool kit for life.

"Comets are treasure chests," said Mark McCaughrean, senior ESA scientific advisor. "We could be comet stuff ourselves."


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IRON AND ICE
Europe set to make space history with comet landing
Paris (AFP) Nov 08, 2014
One of the biggest gambles in space history comes to a climax on Wednesday when Europe attempts to make the first-ever landing on a comet. Speeding towards the Sun at 65,000 kilometres (40,600 miles) per hour, a lab called Philae will detach from its mothership Rosetta, heading for a deep-space rendezvous laden with risk. The 100-kilogram (220-pound) probe will seek out a minuscule landi ... read more


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