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Highlights From ESA's Rosetta Mission Landing On Comet 67P
Space.com
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09/05/2025
The Philae lander from European Space Agency's Rosetta mission's landed on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
Credit: ESA - European Space Agency
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Tech
Transcript
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00:00
This is the moment we made history by landing on a comet.
00:10
Ten years ago, our Rosetta mission got up close and personal with a comet,
00:17
landing a probe called Philae on the surface to directly study the properties of a comet for the first time ever.
00:26
The mission was groundbreaking. It was only the seventh celestial object we have landed on before.
00:34
It was an ambitious journey filled with many ups and downs.
00:38
But we're getting ahead of ourselves. Let's take a look back at the mission ten years on.
00:44
Comets are large objects made of dust and ice that have elliptical orbits around the sun,
00:58
which stretch far out into the outer edges of the solar system.
01:02
They are believed to be left over from when the planets formed,
01:06
and scientists think they could hold the answers to how life formed on Earth,
01:11
why we have water on Earth, and how the solar system evolved.
01:17
You may recognise comets from their distinctive bright tail,
01:21
caused by the sun heating up the frozen comet core as they head towards the inner solar system,
01:28
leaving behind this bright streak of dust and gas.
01:32
Most comets are too small and far away to see from Earth,
01:36
even with some of the biggest telescopes.
01:39
And when they do come close, their bright tail obscures our view of the actual comet itself,
01:45
making it hard to see and study from Earth.
01:48
That's where our Rosetta mission comes in.
01:51
Rosetta was launched in March 2004 on one of our Ariane 5 rockets.
02:05
From here, it set off on its 10-year-long journey to Comet 67P, Duryumov-Gerasimenko.
02:14
The comet was chosen as it originated in the Cowper Belt,
02:18
but does not venture out much farther than Jupiter anymore,
02:21
making it perfect to align with Rosetta's journey.
02:24
However, the journey was anything but simple.
02:28
Rosetta required some energy boosts along the way,
02:32
starting with the gravity assist of Earth, just a year after launch,
02:36
which sent the spacecraft on towards Mars for another boost.
02:41
From here, Rosetta came back to Earth before passing by the diamond-shaped asteroid Steinez,
02:48
and returning back to Earth for one final boost.
02:51
Rosetta then got on its way to deeper space,
02:54
flying past the huge ancient rock Letizia, grabbing photos and data along the way.
03:01
After all of this excitement, as Rosetta travelled on farther from the Sun,
03:06
it did not have enough solar power to operate fully.
03:10
So was put into standby mode, sending the spacecraft into a two-year, seven-month and twelve-day slumber.
03:17
In January 2014, the world sent Rosetta a wake-up call,
03:24
and the team got sent to work to make sure all the instruments on board were working after the long break.
03:31
The spacecraft still had ten more manoeuvres to perform,
03:35
to align it correctly with the comet,
03:38
and to get it to the right speed so it would be captured by the comet's gravity
03:42
and not be flung off into space.
03:52
As Rosetta approached Comet 67P, scientists spotted something unusual.
03:58
The team expected to see that the central part of the comet, its nucleus,
04:03
is sort of shaped like a potato,
04:05
but instead, the images Rosetta sent back resembled more of a rubber duck shape.
04:11
It had two lobes, almost as if the two comets had slammed into each other and bonded.
04:17
It looked like nothing we had ever examined in the solar system before.
04:22
This made landing Feely a bit more complicated.
04:26
The complex shape of the comet made for a complex gravity and a strange rotation situation,
04:33
which made flying around it very complicated.
04:37
There were also craters, cliffs, sinkholes and boulders the size of houses,
04:42
which had to be taken into account.
04:45
Rosetta spent a few weeks analysing the comet,
04:48
sending back information so the experts could determine where was best to land.
04:53
Typically landing sites, for example on Mars, take years to select,
04:58
so for Feely it happened exceptionally fast.
05:02
No lander had attempted to make a soft landing on a comet before,
05:07
so there was a lot at stake.
05:09
Finally, the experts decided on the perfect landing spot for Feely,
05:14
and the probe was sent down,
05:16
and the world held its breath for seven hours to hear if the spacecraft landed successfully.
05:24
Touchdown was confirmed at 1703 Central European Time on the 12th of November,
05:30
but there was something strange about the data returned.
05:34
Soon scientists, flight dynamics specialists and engineers concluded
05:39
that Feely did not just touch down once on the comet, but three times.
05:45
The harpoons that were meant to dig Feely into the comet's surface securely
05:50
had not fired, and the lander appeared to be rotating after the first touchdown.
05:55
And then, the lander lifted from the surface, for one hour and fifty minutes.
06:02
During that time, it travelled about one kilometre at a speed of 38 centimetres per second.
06:09
It then made a smaller, second hop, travelling at about three centimetres per second,
06:15
and landing in its final resting place seven minutes later.
06:20
This left Feely in an awkward angle,
06:23
but it was still able to conduct its onboard experiments,
06:26
and send data back down to us here on Earth.
06:30
However, the landing spot had limited sunlight,
06:33
meaning the solar panels could not be charged,
06:36
and Feely eventually lost power after 57 hours.
06:41
In the end, about 80% of the planned science was completed,
06:45
not bad considering the circumstances.
06:48
Meanwhile, Rosetta continued to study the environment of the comet,
06:52
studying the dust particles which flew off as it became more active on its approach to the Sun,
06:58
and monitored the changes on the surface.
07:01
After 211 days, Rosetta noticed a strange signal.
07:07
Scientists analysed the data and realised Feely had woken up,
07:11
after seven months in hibernation.
07:15
Engineers determined that Feely was exposed to sufficient sunlight
07:19
to heat it to an acceptable operating temperature,
07:22
and to generate electricity.
07:25
This allowed for the experts to home in on the final resting place of Feely,
07:29
and allow us to say a final goodbye.
07:39
After becoming the first spacecraft to orbit a comet,
07:42
and the first to deploy a lander, Feely, in November 2014,
07:47
Rosetta continued to monitor the comet's evolution,
07:50
surviving the harsh environment of the comet for 786 days,
07:56
making a few dramatic flybys close to its surface,
07:59
surviving several unexpected outbursts from the comet,
08:03
and recovered from two spacecraft safe modes.
08:08
After almost two years in operation around the comet,
08:11
and 12 years in space,
08:13
Rosetta's own mission would also come to an end on the surface of the comet,
08:17
with a controlled impact.
08:19
Confirmation of the end of the mission arrived at our control centre
08:24
at 13.19 Central European summer time,
08:28
with the loss of Rosetta's signal upon impact.
08:32
The descent gave Rosetta the opportunity to study the comet
08:36
right up until its last moment.
08:39
The world may have said goodbye to Rosetta,
08:41
but its legacy will not be forgotten.
08:44
Rosetta changed our view of how the solar system formed,
08:48
how the planets were made,
08:50
and gave a glimpse at how life could have begun here on Earth.
09:06
Radでしょう?
09:08
How did we叫 them to goes just a few words?
09:09
About 3 years in research with Rosetta.
09:12
He collected all up on Earth.
09:13
Then we navigated and realized it was supernatural.
09:15
Be aware that you could see the Death at sea.
09:16
What's the path?
09:17
What will become an invisible questionable carved
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