Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




IRON AND ICE
Comet-chasing probe to be roused from sleep
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Jan 16, 2014


Mission Rosetta: Behind the names
Paris (AFP) Jan 16, 2014 - If Europe's comet-chasing quest goes well, Rosetta, Philae and even the tongue-twisting Churyumov-Gerasimenko may become household names by the end of the year.

Here's an explanation for the names:

- ROSETTA: The European Space Agency craft is named after the Rosetta Stone, the inscription carved into a rock now housed in the British Museum in London, that helped 19th-century archaeologists unravel one of the greatest enigmas of their time. The stone, bearing a text in hieroglyphs and Greek, was found by French soldiers in 1799 near the village of Rashid (Rosetta) in the Nile delta. An English physicist, Thomas Young, and a French scholar, Jean-Francois Champollion, were able to figure out most of the hieroglyphs thanks to the Greek equivalent. The mysterious culture of the Pharaohs was at last explained, and it is hoped Rosetta the spacecraft will be equally revealing about the life of comets.

- PHILAE: A 15-year-old Italian girl, Serena Olga Vismara, proposed Philae in a Europe-wide competition to name Rosetta's scientific payload, a fridge-sized lab that will conduct experiments on the comet's surface. The name comes from an obelisk, found on the island of Philae on the River Nile, that itself was the key to Rosetta. The obelisk, now standing in a garden of a country house in the southern English county of Dorset, has a bilingual inscription bearing the names of Cleopatra and Ptolemy. This gave Champollion the final clue to decipher the hieroglyphs on the Rosetta Stone.

- 67P/CHURYUMOV-GERASIMENKO: The comet targeted by Rosetta is named after two Soviet astronomers credited with discovering it in 1969 -- Klim Churyumov of the University of Kiev and Svetlana Gerasimenko, of the Institute of Astrophysics in Dushanbe, Tajikistan. Churyumov spotted the comet on a photographic plate taken by Gerasimenko, which explains why a dual credit was accepted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), the Paris-based agency that approves names for heavenly bodies. "P" refers to a periodic comet, or a comet whose revolution around the Sun is less than 200 years. "67" refers to a list number kept by another agency, the US-based Minor Planet Center. The official name is sometimes shortened to "C-G" for ease of pronunciation.

One of the most ambitious missions in the history of space goes into high-risk mode on Monday when Europe rouses a comet-chasing probe from years of hibernation.

"The most important alarm clock in the Solar System" will end the scout Rosetta's long slumber, gearing it for a historic rendezvous in deep space, the European Space Agency says.

Launched almost a decade ago, Rosetta is a billion-dollar bet to prise open the secrets of comets.

Clusters of ice and dust -- which explains their nickname of "dirty snowballs" -- comets are believed to be remnants from the very birth of our star system.

"Unlocking these time capsules, looking at the gas, the dust and particularly the ice they're made of, provides great clues to the origin of our Solar System and, potentially, even of life," said astrophysicist Mark McCaughrean.

"This time capsule has been locked for 4.6 billion years. It's time to unlock the treasure chest."

To team up with Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, Rosetta was launched in 2004 on a trek of seven billion kilometres (4.3 billion miles) around the inner Solar System.

Like a game of cosmic billiards, the probe zoomed three times around Earth and once around Mars, using the planets' gravitational pull as a slingshot to gain velocity.

"We had to go around the Sun five times on different orbits to gain speed," said Paolo Ferri, ESA's head of solar and planetary missions.

By June 2011, the probe reached its intended furthest point from the Sun -- at 800 million km (500 million miles) so distant that our star had shrunk to a tepid dot.

While pursuing its path towards the comet, Rosetta at this point closed all its systems for a 31-month energy-saving sleep -- the Sun's light just too dim to nourish the craft's two 14-metre (45-feet) solar arrays -- panels so big they could cover a basketball court.

Wakey wakey

Monday, at 1000 GMT, is when its onboard computer is scheduled to end hibernation -- a "wake up, Rosetta!" moment that ESA has turned into a Youtube video competition.

At that point, nerves at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany, will be stretched.

It will take Rosetta nearly six hours to fire up and test all its systems. It is so far away that, provided everything is OK, the "all systems nominal" radio signal will take 45 minutes to reach home.

"The coming months are going to be even more complex," said Ferri.

Rosetta will progressively carry out braking and steering manoeuvres designed to get it on track with Comet "C-G."

In August, the craft will be inserted into an orbit just 25 kilometres (15 miles) above the comet, using 11 cameras, radar, microwave, infrared and other sensors to scan its surface.

In November, it will send down a fridge-sized robot laboratory, Philae, designed to harpoon itself to the crumbly comet surface and carry out experiments.

"We want to know everything about the comet -- magnetic field, composition, temperature, everything," said Amalia Ercoli-Finzi, in charge of one of the 10 instruments aboard Philae.

Over the last quarter-century, 11 unmanned spacecraft have been sent on missions to comets, most of them flybys.

Successes include the US Stardust probe, which brought home dusty grains snatched from a comet's wake, and Europe's Giotto, which ventured to within 200 km (120 miles) of a comet's surface.

But Rosetta should -- in theory -- cap them all in terms of its sampling size and proximity.

The Solar System has thousands and possibly millions of comets, which loop around the Sun in orbits ranging from a few decades to millennia.

Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is named after a pair of Soviet astronomers who in 1969 became the first to spot it.

It was designated for the mission because it once had a very elliptical, or egg-shaped, orbit.

This meant that it spent billions of years in the depths of the Solar System, preserved by deep chill, and relatively little time exposed to the warming and weathering effect of the Sun.

The track changed in 1959, when the comet was nudged onto a different path when it flew close to Jupiter, the biggest planet of the Solar System. It now returns every 6.6 years.

.


Related Links
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








IRON AND ICE
What happens to ISON's remains?
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 19, 2013
Apologies for going quiet on this site - it takes a while to recover from events like this! I have actually started several blog posts and then never gotten chance to finish them. That will happen eventually, and I'll post new content on here from time to time, but right now I just want to address this one issue that I'm still getting an email bombardment about: what happens now to comet ISON's ... read more


IRON AND ICE
Raytheon resumes work on US Navy Air and Missile Defense Radar

Israel's Rafael and Raytheon to co-produce Iron Dome

Lockheed Martin Advances Affordability Across U.S. Navy's Aegis Weapons System To Secure Multi-Year Contract

Boeing and Israel Aerospace Industries' Arrow 3 Interceptor Completes Second Flight Test

IRON AND ICE
Raytheon receives SM-3 contract

Iran mulls replacement for Russian S-300 missile system

Lockheed Martin Receives Contracts for JASSM Production

Israel successfully tests Arrow space missile interceptor

IRON AND ICE
Hunter Unmanned Aircraft System Surpasses 100,000 Combat Flight Hours

Northrop Grumman's Global Hawk Boasts Best Safety Record Designation

McCain fury over 'secret' Congress move on drones

Global Hawk Aids in Philippine Relief Efforts

IRON AND ICE
Boeing Transmits Protected Government Signal Through Military Satellite

Fifth MUOS Completes Assembly, Enters System Test

Northrop Grumman Supports US Marine Corps Command, Control and Communications Facility for Tactical Air Operations

Rocket Rokot brings 3 Russian military-purpose satellites on orbit

IRON AND ICE
US Navy Awards Lockheed Martin Contract for Production of Paveway II

US probes Honeywell over sensor made in China

Kongsberg to upgrade Australia's Protector stations

Raytheon awarded $12.9 million Cooperative Engagement Capability contract

IRON AND ICE
Israel, Singapore seek FMS deals

Philippines set to buy more BAE personnel carriers

Riyadh's $3B arms aid for Lebanon boosts French defense sales

Africa grows in importance for defense companies

IRON AND ICE
Chinese troops bolster UN peacekeeping mission in Mali

China slams 'troublemaker' Japan after Africa visit

British cuts limiting military partnership with US: Gates

Japan brushes off China 'troublemaker' criticism

IRON AND ICE
Extraordinary sensors pushed to their boundaries

Understanding secondary light emissions by plasmonic nanostructures

No nano-dust danger from facade paint

Discovery at nanoscale has major implications for manufacturers




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement