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Launched on board an Ariane rocket in March 2004, Rosetta has taken a long route around our Solar System to catch up with comet 67P. In a series of fly-pasts, the probe used the gravity of the Earth and Mars to increase its speed during the 6 billion km chase.  You could almost feel the sense of relief in the corridors that, after managing a 10-year trek through space with extraordinary accuracy, and after investing more than one billion euros, all has gone so well. The signal took nearly 23 minutes to reach us and, when it came, it was a dip in a line on a graph. But this showed that the final burn to reach the comet had finished and this key moment was the trigger for a wave of pride rather than jubilation. Getting a spacecraft to match the speed of a comet and effectively ride alongside it is a landmark in space exploration.

But the Hard Work Starts Now:

To save energy, controllers at Esa's centre in Darmstadt, Germany, put Rosetta into hibernation for 31 months. In January they successfully woke the craft from its slumber as it began the final leg of the daring encounter. For the past two months, Rosetta has been carrying out a series of manoeuvres to slow the probe down. The comet is travelling at 55,000km per hour (34,175 mph). The spacecraft's speed has been adjusted so that in relative terms it will be flying beside the comet at a slow walking pace of 1m/sec (2.2mph, 3.6kph). At a distance of 550 million km from the Earth, messages are taking over 22 minutes to get to Rosetta. The distances involved are so great that the complex final command sequence for Wednesday's crucial thruster burn had to be issued on Monday night. "This arrival phase in fact is the most complex and exotic trajectory that we have ever seen," said Jean-Yves Le Gall, president of the French Space Agency CNES. Rosetta will have to continue to fire its thrusters every few days to maintain a hyberbolic orbit at 100km above the rotating rock. The craft will then travel alongside the comet for the next 15 months, studying it with a range of instruments. Rosetta has been taking increasingly detailed photographs of 67P as it gets closer. The mysterious comet has been dubbed the "rubber duck", as some images seem to show the familiar shape as it twirls in space.
 Rosetta_comet_Size

Key Facts of the Mission:

Total cost is said to be 1.3bn euros
The probe weighed in at 3,000kg at liftoff back in 2004, with over half of that made up of propellant
It has two 14m long solar panels to provide electrical power
The orbiter carries 11 experiments
The lander, Philae, carries nine experiments including a drill to sample beneath the surface
 
Project scientist, Dr Matt Taylor, said: "For me this is the sexiest, most fantastic mission there's ever been.  It's ticking a number of boxes in terms of fascination, exploration, technology and science - predominantly science."
 Rosetta_Has_Cought_Up_with_67P

Harpooning a Comet:

As it moves towards the Sun, 67P will warm up and its trailing halo of gas and dust - known as the coma - will increase, offering the orbiter the chance to do some detailed scientific work. "We've seen evidence of the out-gassing of the coma, the outer atmosphere of the comet, this is made of dust and gas," said Dr Taylor. "We have instruments on board that will start sniffing for this gas and taste it, we will also be collecting some of this dust and touching the coma itself. Hopefully that will occur sometime this week." The mission gets even more ambitious in November when, after moving Rosetta closer to 67P, mission controllers will attempt to put the Philae lander on the surface. The lander will use harpoons to anchor itself and will carry out a series of experiments, including drilling into the material that makes up the comet.  The mission aims to add to knowledge of comets and their role in ferrying the building blocks of life around the early Solar System.
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