Featured Post

Review: Leatherstocking Golf Course (Part 1)

Most people who visit Cooperstown, New York, are going to see the National Baseball Hall of Fame. It is the obvious reason to visit the town...

Friday, September 30, 2016

Farewell to Rosetta

Today, the Rosetta space probe, which had been in orbit around Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko for just over two years, was deliberately steered into Comet 67P for a crash landing, ending the mission.

Credit: ESA/Rosetta/NAVCAM, CC BY-SA IGO 3.0
Now, when I say crash landing, that's a bit of an exaggeration. Comet 67P doesn't have a lot of gravity, so instead of some big, spectacular crash, with debris flying everywhere, the collision looked a little more like this. And much like the Philae lander, Rosetta probably did its fair share of bouncing before it finally came to rest.

So, what's the reasoning behind ending the Rosetta mission? It's simple, really, Rosetta is solar powered, and Comet 67P is moving away from the sun. The solar panels simply aren't big enough to sustain Rosetta out past the orbit of Jupiter. I'm not exactly sure why Rosetta has to be crashed into the comet, but what do I know?

So, Rosetta then! It was an ambitious idea, getting a space probe in orbit around a comet. After all, comets are very small and have big, highly elliptical orbits. We've visited comets in the past, starting in 1986 when Giotto and Vega 1 and 2 flew by Halley's Comet. But Rosetta was different. And it took its sweet time doing it, too. Rosetta was launched in 2004, but didn't establish orbit until 2014. Now, Rosetta has made plenty of useful observations, and the scientists still have a lot of data to go over, but that's not why people know about Rosetta. No, people know Rosetta because of Philae, the little lander that Rosetta dropped on the comet.

Now, to be honest, Philae wasn't very successful. The probe was supposed to attach itself to the surface via harpoon, but the harpoons failed, and the probe bounced from its designated landing spot to a much less hospitable spot underneath a cliff in basically permanent shadow. This was not the best spot for a solar powered probe, and after a couple of days, the onboard batteries were dead. Philae made intermittent contact whenever it came back into the light in June 2015, but nothing firm was established, and final contact occurred not long afterward. From a scientific standpoint, Philae was a disappointment. Most, but not all of the science got done, but considering the runaway success of some of the other space probes out there, three days of operation when weeks or months were expected is a letdown. But that's not what people will remember. No, people will remember the plucky little space probe that travelled millions of miles to go land on a comet. In our social media age, its Twitter might have helped.

So, here's to Rosetta and Philae. The space probes that voyaged across the inner solar system for 10 years to meet a tiny little comet, and tell us all about the history of our solar system.


No comments:

Post a Comment