The Herald

Joy after missing comet lander wakes up

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COMET lander Philae has woken up from hibernatio­n after being missing for months.

The European Space Agency (Esa) announced the news in a tweet, which read: “Incredible news! My lander Philae is awake!”

It said the probe communicat­ed with the ground team on earth for around 85 seconds on Saturday night.

Philae had been in hibernatio­n since November when it became the first spacecraft to touch down on the surface of a comet. It is designed to analyse ice and rock on 67P.

The German Aerospace Centre, which operates Philae, said the lander resumed communicat­ion at 10.28pm local time on Saturday night, sending about 300 packages of data to earth via its mother ship Rosetta, which is orbiting the comet.

“Philae is doing very well,” project manager Stephan Ulamec said.

Shortly after its historic landing, Philae managed to conduct experiment­s and send data to earth for about 60 hours before its batteries were depleted and it was forced into hibernatio­n. In January, Esa called off the search for the probe.

Scientists still do not know precisely where Philae touched down on 67P/ Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o on November 12, after bouncing twice on the icy comet when its anchoring system failed.

Studies of images taken by the orbiter have shown Philae crossed a large depression named ‘’Hatmehit’’ before coming to rest at an angle close to a crater or cliff.

Philae’s landing on a fa st-moving comet 300 million miles away has been hailed as one of humankind’s greatest scientific achievemen­ts.

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