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Rosetta & Philae
I am surprised that no one has started something on this achievement so here goes.
I think that this is one of the most important achievements of recent history. Humans have landed a spacecraft on a foreign body traveling through the solar system at astonishing speed and with such a small gravitational field it produced the kind of problems we find every year in our games. Reading this morning, the gravitational field of a 4 kM object makes the lander's 200 lb weight equivalent to about 1/30 of an ounce. This required the lander to screw itself into the surface of the comet to hold on. The comet is currently traveling about 23 miles/sec and is 315 million miles from earth. Imagine that! A ship traveling for more than ten years, catches up with an object traveling at 88,00 miles per hour, over 300 milllion miles from Earth and then was able to land on that moving object. Add to that, an unknown surface, temperatures of -70 on the surface and gas escaping constantly in the solar wind. I can't think of anything but "cool"! |
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It's truly inspiring. Also, NASA's first Orion test flight is within a couple weeks! If this flight also goes well, they will use this crew module in future flights to land more people on the moon, asteroids, and even mars.
We're living in a freaking awesome time. |
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You can relive the excitement here (through Randal's eyes)
Disclaimer: Expect to lose an hour of your life to this. |
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The accomplish is novel and impressive because of a host of other factors, including but not limited to its size, gravity, terrain, rotation period, and orbit. 1at the time of landing |
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Earth to solar orbit, earth assist, mars assist, earth assist, asteroid flyby earth assist again, another asteroid flyby, then rendezvous with the comet. Planning a trajectory with 4 assists, 2 flybys, and final orbit in mind over a 12 year period is a very easy thing to screw up |
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They had this thing sit silent for 10 years! Then they used gravity to sling them around, then they did some zig zags to slow down, then they landed a little pod on the comet and drilled into it!
I don't even know I am going to eat later on today and these guys planned most of this 10 years ago! |
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However, this is still a huge accomplishment, and according to BBC, "the probe managed to complete more than 80% of its planned primary science campaign on the surface", including drilling into the comet's surface, and was able to send its data back to Earth before losing contact. Scientists are hoping that as the comet approaches the sun (which sounds like next August), Philae will get enough light to reboot and charge its battery again. |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H08tGjXNHO4
I saw the above a few days before the landing. Well worth the watch. (As a mentor, there are days I feel like the Male character) And Philae may reawaken. We'll have to wait til next August but if it does, be curious to see what happens then. Maybe it'll get enough sunlight to keep it charged for a more prolonged period of observation. |
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Dave Lavery keeps tweeting some really interesting things about the mission.
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Philae is currently in a coma.
Maybe it will wake up by the time Chury-Gera gets a coma of its own. |
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Hopefully, the solar panels will be able to get sunlight before the electronics freeze. Once that happens, it's likely game over. I don't know the battery life in sleep mode, nor what temperature minimum the electronics can withstand. Has anyone found this information? I know without heaters, current flight hardware lasts only minutes.
On the plus side, useful science data was acquired from Philae and this will give us new insight into comets. Oh yes, and ESA gets the award for the coolest video associated with the Rosetta mission. |
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How do we know we live in the future? Two people looked at each other and seriously asked, "Did our robot just bounce off that comet?" Maybe one day bounced comet landings will be as routine as bounced airplane landings. One space robot taking pictures of another space robot |
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