End is nigh for Rosetta: Spacecraft will meet its end by crashing into a comet
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Scientists hope to collect close-up data about comet right until the very end.
Eric Berger
After launching 12 years ago and achieving its primary mission of
reaching an orbit around Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, the aging
Rosetta spacecraft will now die. On September 30, the European Space
Agency says it will command Rosetta to crash into the comet it has been following since 2014.
Now at a distance of more than 850 million km from the Sun, Rosetta's
two solar arrays cannot collect enough power to guarantee the
spacecraft's heaters will keep it warm enough to survive. Instead of
putting Rosetta into hibernation, which engineers believe is not
survivable, Rosetta will follow its Philae lander to the surface of the
comet.
The journey, at least, should prove fruitful. During
the final hours of descent, Rosetta will attempt to capture
some very-high-resolution images of the comet while collecting other
data about 67P. Scientists hope communications with the spacecraft
continue right up until the very end—when it crashes into the comet.
“We’re trying to squeeze as many observations in as possible before we run out of solar power,” said
Matt Taylor, ESA Rosetta project scientist. “30 September will mark the
end of spacecraft operations, but the beginning of the phase where the
full focus of the teams will be on science. That is what the Rosetta
mission was launched for, and we have years of work ahead of us,
thoroughly analyzing its data.”
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