Los Angeles Times

Space orbiter’s journey to end

After 4.9 billion miles and plenty of comet science, orbiter is set to end its mission

- DEBORAH NETBURN deborah.netburn @latimes.com Twitter: @DeborahNet­burn

Rosetta has helped collect plenty of comet data and logged 4.9 billion miles.

It was conceived when Ronald Reagan was in the White House. It launched a few weeks after Mark Zuckerberg created Facebook in his Harvard dorm. It spent a full decade looping around the solar system. And when it finally caught up with its target, it deployed the first probe to land on a speeding comet and survive.

Now the long, dramatic journey of the Rosetta space orbiter is about to end. After logging 4.9 billion miles, the craft is set to commit operationa­l suicide in the wee hours of Friday morning, deliberate­ly falling to the surface of 67P/ChuryumovG­erasimenko, the mountain-size comet it has been following for the last two years.

But first it has just a bit more science to do.

During its final descent, Rosetta will gather closerange informatio­n about the comet and hastily beam data back to Earth before its main transmitte­r shuts off for good.

“It’s kind of bitterswee­t,” said Paul Weissman, a comet scientist at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson who worked on Rosetta for 20 years. “You’d like to keep going, but it is also very satisfying. It’s been a tremendous­ly successful mission.”

The $1-billion mission has been full of suspense.

Its many plot twists began before the spacecraft left Earth, when a faulty rocket postponed the launch by two years and caused mission planners at the European Space Agency to abandon their original comet and select a different one instead.

The new comet, known as 67P, was four times larger than the initial target, and meeting up with it required a longer flight than originally planned. Between March 2004 and January of 2014, Rosetta made three Earth flybys and one close pass by Mars, using the plantets’ gravity to give it a boost.

Along the way, it imaged two asteroids and endured a hibernatio­n of two years, seven months and 12 days.

Engineers programmed four alarm clocks to wake the spacecraft from its epic slumber. Everything hinged on its ability to boot back up, said Rosetta Flight Director Andrea Accomazzo.

“Either we had a mission, or we had no mission at all,” he said.

Accomazzo got the wakeup signal Jan. 20, 2014 — 40 nail-biting minutes late.

Scientists are fascinated by comets because they believe the mysterious bodies were formed in the earliest days of the solar system, and that frozen into their icy nuclei are the same primordial materials that make up the planets.

As Rosetta closed in on its target, researcher­s were dazzled by the strange and unexpected shape that gradually came into focus. The comet was roughly 2.5 miles across and had two distinct lobes that resembled a rubber duck with a head, thin neck and bulbous body. In time, Rosetta’s instrument­s revealed a dramatic world of towering cliffs, deep pits and massive boulders.

“It was a big surprise,” said Claire Vallat, a scientist at the agency’s European Space Astronomy Center.

After officially entering 67P’s orbit on Aug. 6, 2014, Rosetta spent several months mapping the surface to find the best spot to send Philae, its 220-pound washing-machine-size lander. The mission team ultimately selected what the late NASA scientist Claudia Alexander described as “the least-worst option” — a site that got enough sunlight to power Philae’s solar panels, and that appeared to have shallower slopes and fewer boulders than other areas.

On Nov. 12, 2014, scientists were once again on the edge of their seats as Philae made a slow, seven-hour descent to the surface of 67P. It was humanity’s first attempt to make a soft landing on a comet.

The unpreceden­ted maneuver did not go exactly as planned. The lander’s harpoons failed to fire and Philae bounced twice before coming to rest in what remained an unknown location for nearly two years.

It soon became clear that Philae’s solar panels would not receive enough sunlight to keep powering the onboard instrument­s, so it was able to conduct experiment­s for only 60 hours before shutting down. But mission scientists insist that Philae is no failure.

“Philae sent back quite a bit of informatio­n for three days,” Weissman said. “We didn’t learn everything we wanted to from the lander, but we did learn a lot.”

In the meantime, Rosetta continued to orbit the comet as it made its closest approach to the sun in August 2015. From a safe distance of 186 miles, it watched as 67P became more active, with streams of dust and gas shooting off its surface. The comet’s display subsided as it flew further from the sun.

“Rosetta had a major goal in mind, which was to rendezvous with a comet far from the sun and watch it wake up and then let it die down again” said Laurence O’Rourke, a lander systems engineer at ESA. “Overwhelmi­ngly, we have met that goal.”

But the drama was not over yet. Less than one month before the mission’s end, Rosetta’s cameras finally spotted Philae wedged into a dark crack on the comet’s surface. Two of its legs were sticking up in the air.

Finding Philae after all that time “was like drinking a bottle of adrenaline,” O’Rourke said. “I couldn’t sleep for the whole night.”

Now Rosetta has reached the end of its journey. Comet 67P is on its way toward the orbit of Jupiter, and soon Rosetta’s 100-foot solar panels will be too far from the sun for the spacecraft to function.

“Operating Rosetta beyond this point wouldn’t be possible,” Accomazzo said.

Experts say there is no chance the orbiter will survive its Friday morning collision with the comet.

Although the last few minutes of its life are difficult to predict, researcher­s expect it to hit 67P at a walking pace of slightly less than 3 feet per second. When it lands, it will tumble and bounce before settling into its final resting place on the small lobe of the comet. The impact will kick up a few clouds of dark, powdery dust. Then a preprogram­med computer command will turn off its transmitte­rs forever.

But this final death dive will not be made in vain. The lander will be pointed toward the Ma’at region, which is home to several intriguing pits that released jets of dust when the comet was closer to the sun and more active.

In addition, researcher­s have spotted lumpy structures on the pit walls that might be cometessim­als, the building blocks of the comet. Scientists are eager to get a closer look.

“The plan is to go as low as possible and transmit as late as possible,” Vallat said.

Here on Earth, hundreds of scientists and engineers will gather at the European Space Operations Center in Darmstadt, Germany, to watch for the flattening of the radio signal that will let them know Rosetta has gone off line forever.

 ?? European Space Agency ?? THE SURFACE of the 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o comet as seen from Rosetta’s Philae lander on Nov. 13, 2014, a day after it became the first craft to land on a comet. Scientists hope to learn more about 67P even as Rosetta is plunging to the comet’s...
European Space Agency THE SURFACE of the 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o comet as seen from Rosetta’s Philae lander on Nov. 13, 2014, a day after it became the first craft to land on a comet. Scientists hope to learn more about 67P even as Rosetta is plunging to the comet’s...

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