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A handout photo released yesterday by the European Space Agency shows (from left to right) Rosetta’s Philae lander as it approached and then rebounded from its first touchdown on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on November 12. The mosaic comprises a series of images captured by Rosetta’s OSIRIS camera over a 30-minute period spanning the first touchdown. The images were taken with Rosetta’s OSIRIS narrow-angle camera when the spacecraft was 17.5km from the comet centre, or roughly 15.5km from the surface. The image taken after touchdown, at 15:43 GMT, confirms that the lander was moving east, as first suggested by the data returned by the CONSERT experiment, and at a speed of about 0.5m/s. The final location of Philae is still not known, but after touching down and bouncing again at 17:25 GMT, it reached there at 17:32 GMT.
AFP/Paris
Mankind’s first-ever probe of a comet found traces of organic molecules and a surface much harder than imagined, scientists said yesterday of initial sample data from robot lab Philae.
Philae fell asleep on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on Saturday, having run out of onboard battery power after 60 hours of prodding and probing an object zipping towards the Sun at 18km per second.
The lander control centre in Cologne, operated by German Aerospace Centre (DLR), said Philae had uncovered much about the comet in spite of a rough touchdown in a less-than-perfect spot.
“We are well on our way to achieving a greater understanding of comets,” Ekkehard Kuhrt, project scientific director, said in a statement. “Their surface properties appear to be quite different than was previously thought.”
Philae landed on “67P” last Wednesday after a nail-biting seven-hour, 20km descent from Rosetta, its orbiting mothership which had travelled more than a decade and 6.5bn km to meet up with the comet in August this year.
The touchdown 510mn km from Earth did not go entirely as planned, when Philae’s duo of anchoring harpoons failed to deploy and it bounced twice before ending up in a crevice, its solar panels shadowed from battery-boosting sunlight.
Among the most anticipated data from the comet probe had been the chemical analysis of a drill sample which scientists hoped would shed some light on the origins of the Solar System some 4.6bn years ago, and maybe even life on Earth.
The DLR said the MUPUS probe, one of Philae’s 10 onboard science instrument, hammered into the comet to discover it was “a tough nut to crack”.
“Although the power of the hammer was gradually increased, we were not able to go deep into the surface,” said research team leader Tilman Spohn.
Electric and acoustic experiments confirmed the comet was “not nearly as soft and fluffy as it was believed to be” underneath a surface layer of dust.
Despite its imperfect footing, Philae managed to deploy a drill, but it was not clear whether any soil sample had been examined onboard.
Yet the team said Philae’s COSAC gas analyser managed to “’sniff’ the atmosphere and detect the first organic molecules” shortly after landing.
Some astrophysicists theorise that comets “seeded” our fledgling planet with the beginnings of life-giving water and organic molecules, and hoped that analysis of “67P” would prove this.
“Analysis of the spectra and the identification of the molecules are continuing,” said the statement.
Project manager Stephan Ulamec said he was confident Philae would make contact later “and that we will be able to operate the instruments again” as the comet moves closer to the Sun.
By spring of 2015 (about March-May in the northern hemisphere), it is hoped that Philae will communicate with its mothership and by summer “it might be possible that temperatures on the comet will allow Philae’s battery to be recharged”.
Rosetta will continue orbiting the comet to receive any signals from Philae, if it were to wake up from hibernation.
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