Saturday, November 15, 2014

ESA Rosetta mission: Crippled Philae lander endeavours to transmit relevant data

Animator's picture of Philae on the comet 67/P now appears more idealistic and hugely optimistic.

A report on the Philae spacecraft's verified Twitter feed suggests the probe has successfully "hopped" into a new position which may enable its solar panels to work

There was fresh hope for the Rosetta mission after scientists reconnected with the probe which could be holding key information about how life on Earth began.

The 25-year mission was thrown into jeopardy after the Philae craft bounced away from its landing site on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and became stuck under a cliff.

Scientists had been working on attempts to find and move the probe before it ran out of battery power.

But on Friday those plans were abandoned and instead they began drilling beneath the surface of the comet in an attempt to get some samples on board for analysis.

ESA Philae landers' instruments listed. Consert, Romap, SD2 and Mupus have been initiated but results are unknown.

Contact with the lander was lost before the data could be sent back to Earth, but late last night Philae re-established radio contact with its orbiting Rosetta satellite and is sending data from the surface.

However, less than an hour later scientist confirmed the lander was "getting tired" and the battery voltage was approaching the limit.

Daniel Scuka, Senior Editor for Spacecraft Operations at ESOC, said on the mission blog: "While the search for the final landing site is still on-going, the lander is racing against the clock to meet as many of the core science goals as possible before the primary battery is exhausted.

"Under the low illumination conditions at Philae's location, it is unlikely that the secondary batteries will charge up enough to enable extended surface operations."

They confirmed that they had received data from Philae, and that the drill had moved up and down, but they were unsure what data they had.

A report on the spacecraft's verified Twitter feed, Philae Lander @Philae2014, suggests the craft has successfully "hopped" into a new position, possibly one that will enable more sunlight to shine on its solar panels.

The first of two messages at about 11pm read: "I just started lifting myself up a little and will now rotate and try and optimise the solar power."

This was quickly followed by another which said: "My rotation was successful (35 degrees). Looks like a whole new comet from this angle."

Philae has imaged three different spots on the comet, it was confirmed.

This may be the sum total of knowledge taken out of the Rosetta Philae lander chapter of the mission.

However, in a less optimistic update just before midnight Mr Scuka added: "On board Philae, system voltage has fallen very close to 21.5V; below that, the battery won't last much longer. At this time, there is insufficient sunlight to provide power."

Rosetta The comet is a remnant from the early solar system and may hold clues about how life on Earth began.

Many scientists believe that comets were the driving force, delivering water and amino acids to the planet during the "bombardment phase" about four billion years ago.

If the link with the probe is lost, there is a faint possibility that the solar panels will begin working again when the comet's orbit brings it closer to the Sun.

"We can only hope that as we approach the Sun, maybe in August, if we don't have dust or a huge coma [a dust cloud around the comet] blocking the Sun, then perhaps there would be a chance we could come back and at least see how the lander is doing," said Valentina Lommats, of the German Space Agency.

Crucially, the team had still not located the lander on Friday. On Thursday, team members said they believed Philae had bounced twice before settling in a crater east of the original landing site.

However, scans by the Osiris camera on board the Rosetta mother ship failed to locate the probe.

Rosetta has now started scanning other areas.

An animated gif of the Philae lander departing from Rosetta on its risky but calamitous journey onto the comet 67/P.

However, scientists were confident that they had collected a huge amount of a data, around 90 per cent of what they were hoping for before the solar panels were needed to extend the mission.

Even if Philae's job is finished, the Rosetta mission is to continue.

Rosetta will remain alongside the comet as it moves closer to the Sun.

Instruments on board will analyse the gases of the tail and the comet's interior, measure dust grains and study its atmosphere and gravity.

The comet will reach its closest distance to the Sun on Aug 13 next year, at about 115 million miles, roughly between the orbits of Earth and Mars.

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