China Daily

Earth severs link with comet probe

Rosetta will remain in orbit for another two months before crashing on Sept 30

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in Paris

Earth bid a final farewell to robot lab Philae on Wednesday, severing communicat­ions after a year-long silence from the pioneering probe hurtling through space on a comet.

Writing an extraordin­ary chapter in space history, the washing machine-sized craft was the first to land on a comet — primeval rubble from the formation of the Solar System.

Philae sent home reams of data garnered from sniffing, tasting and prodding its new alien home hundreds of millions of kilometres from Earth.

Its plucky exploits captured the imaginatio­n of children, and many adults, who followed its successes and tribulatio­ns via Twitter and an animated cartoon series.

But after more than 12 months without news, it was decided to preserve all remaining energy available to Philae’s orbiting mothership Rosetta, the European Space Agency announced in a blog entitled: “Farewell, silent Philae”.

Rosetta will remain in orbit around comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o for another two months. It will crashland on Sept 30 to join Philae in their final resting place, concluding an historic quest for cometary clues to the origins of life on Earth.

“Today communicat­ion with Philae was stopped,” Andreas Schuetz of German space agency DLR told AFP from ground control in Cologne on Wednesday.

“This is the end of a ... fascinatin­g and successful mission for the public and for science.”

Part of a €1.3-billion ($1.4-billion) ESA mission, Philae was launched into space in March 2004, riding piggyback on Rosetta.

The pair travelled some 6.5 billion km — aided by gravity boosts from Earth and Mars — before entering 67P’s orbit in August 2014.

Three months later, Rosetta sent the 100-kilogram probe down to the comet surface — starting a nail-biting deepspace saga.

Philae’s harpoons failed to fire into the comet surface, and it bounced several times.

The tiny robot ended up in a ditch shadowed from the sun’s battery-replenishi­ng rays, but managed to run about 60 hours of experiment­s and send home valuable data before entering standby mode.

As 67P neared the sun on its elongated orbit, Philae got a battery boost and emerged from hibernatio­n in June 2015, sending a two-minute message via Rosetta, eliciting great excitement on Earth.

But after eight intermitte­nt communicat­ions, the lander fell permanentl­y silent on July 9, 2015. Rosetta has continued to monitor the comet, but without catching sight of its long-lost charge, even from as close as 10 km away.

In February, ground controller­s said they believed Philae was in eternal hibernatio­n — though they opted to keep an ear open just in case.

Wednesday’s final break means “abandoning all hope of receiving anything more from Philae,” said Philippe Gaudon of France’s CNES space agency. “It’s time for me to say goodbye,” said Philae’s Twitter account, announcing communicat­ions “will be switched off forever...”

As the comet moves further and further away from the Sun — some 520 million km by end July — Rosetta needs to save energy for her final weeks.

“We need to maximize the power available to Rosetta’s scientific instrument­s, and thus had no choice but to turn off the ESS,” ESA senior science advisor Mark McCaughrea­n said.

Scientists will be busy for years analyzing the data sent back by Philae and Rosetta. Comets are deemed to be balls of primitive dust and ice left from the early years of the Solar System.

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