NEW YORK: The European Space Agency (ESA) announced Tuesday that its historic comet-chasing mission Rosetta had been extended until the end of September 2016.
“ESA’s Science Programme Committee has given formal approval to continue the mission for an additional nine months,” ESA said.
In a final flourish, the spacecraft may be “landed” on 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the comet it has been following, the agency said in a press release. Launched in 2004, the mission has been applauded as a milestone in the exploration of space.
It comprises an orbiter, Rosetta, and a robot lab, Philae, which seek to unveil the secrets of comets — primordial clusters of ice and dust that may shed light on the formation of the Solar System and on how life developed on Earth.After a 10-year chase, the pair caught up with 67P last August.
In November, Philae was landed on the comet surface, and in a dramatic 60-hour episode carried out a range of experiments before its stored battery power gave out. But the 100-kilo (220-pound) lab has now revived, thanks to sunlight bathing its solar panels as the comet hurtles towards the Sun.
Both Rosetta and Philae will have a grandstand view when 67P reaches perihelion, its closest point to the Sun, on August 13, scientists hope. The comet will then loop back into deep space, beginning another six-and-a-half-year trek around our star.
The mission had been nominally funded until the end of December 2015, and its extension was not a surprise.
Tesla driverless system to use updated radar technology
WASHINGTON: Electric carmaker Tesla announced Sunday it was upgrading its Autopilot software to use more advanced radar technology. In a...