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26 - Rosetta lander Philae

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2009

Andrew Ball
Affiliation:
The Open University, Milton Keynes
James Garry
Affiliation:
Universiteit Leiden
Ralph Lorenz
Affiliation:
The Johns Hopkins University
Viktor Kerzhanovich
Affiliation:
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Summary

ESA's Rosetta mission was launched on 2 March 2004, and is destined to reach its target comet, 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, in 2014. The lander of the Rosetta mission, named Philae, is expected to be deployed around November 2014, to make the first ever controlled landing on a comet nucleus. En route, the mission's interplanetary trajectory takes in four gravity assists, three at Earth and one at Mars, and two asteroid flybys. Having matched the comet's orbit, Rosetta will close in to perform a comprehensive remote sensing survey of the nucleus and its environment prior to final selection of the landing site and deployment of the lander.

The finally launched mission had evolved a great deal over several iterations since the initial conception of a ‘mission to the primitive bodies of the Solar System’ around 1985 as a cornerstone of ESA's new Horizon 2000 science programme (this was almost a year before ESA's Giotto spacecraft had encountered comet Halley). The mission plan has always incorporated a surface element, though initially this was to obtain a sample for return to Earth. Known briefly as the Comet Nucleus Sample Return (CNSR) mission, it had by 1987 been renamed Rosetta. By the end of 1985 a joint ESA/NASA Science Definition Team had been formed to define in detail the mission's scientific objectives; NASA being envisaged as a partner for ESA on the mission.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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