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Rosetta mission: Potential comet landing sites chosen | Rosetta mission: Potential comet landing sites chosen |
(8 months later) | |
Europe's Rosetta mission, which aims to put a robot on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, has identified five potential locations for the touchdown. | Europe's Rosetta mission, which aims to put a robot on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, has identified five potential locations for the touchdown. |
The choice of sites was driven largely by operational considerations - they are places engineers believe a lander can get down with the least risk. | |
No-one has attempted to land on a 10-billion-tonne comet before. | |
The Rosetta probe will despatch its Philae contact robot to 67P's icy surface on 11 November. | |
The European Space Agency says it will be a one-shot opportunity. | |
Rosetta and the comet are currently about 400 million km from Earth, making real-time radio control impossible. | |
Instead, the process will have to be fully automated with commands uploaded several days in advance. | |
The five sites on the "longlist" were selected at the end of a special meeting convened in Toulouse, France, this past weekend. | |
Esa project managers were joined by attendees from the space agencies of France (Cnes) and Germany (DLR), which play key roles in the Philae effort. | |
Instrument principal investigators on the washing machine-sized robot were also there to argue their preferences, as were the engineers, who could explain the technical possibilities. | |
If one considers the comet to look like a rubber duck, then three of the chosen potentials (B, I and J) are on the head. Two are on the body (A and C). The dramatic neck region has been ruled out. | |
The letter designation stems from an even longer list of 10 that was used to kick-off the whole selection process. The letter ordering carries no weight. | |
A landing site needs to be relatively flat and free from boulders and fissures. | |
One key requirement has been the need to find places on the comet that experience something of a day/night cycle. | |
This will give not only a better appreciation of the changing behaviour of 67P under all conditions, but will provide the lander with some important protection - from too much sun, which could lead to overheating, or too little light, which would make it difficult to charge the batteries. | |
The engineers have also emphasised the need to find locations where Rosetta can deliver Philae at the right altitude and velocity, and maintain a communications link throughout the descent, which is likely to take several hours. | |
The longlist will be reduced to a leading candidate and perhaps a couple of back-ups in mid-September. | |
A final go/no-go decision on a target landing site is expected by mid-October. | |
By then, Rosetta's cameras and other instruments will have returned detailed data on the number one choice. | |
Comet 67P has very little gravitational attraction - several hundred thousand times weaker than what Philae would experience at the Earth's surface. | |
For this reason, it will touch down at no more than a walking pace - about 1m/s. | |
It will use harpoons and ice screws to try to hang on to the comet and avoid bouncing back into space. | |
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos | Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos |