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-   -   Rosetta going for the comet today (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=216750)

Bilge_Rat 11-12-14 12:57 PM

http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/live-experie...veiaaajcjm.png


photo taken by lander on its way down.

http://www.bbc.com/news/live/science...nment-29985988

Dread Knot 11-12-14 01:37 PM

Radio contact intermittent, but pictures have been received. Any landing you can get pictures from is a good one.

Really good news for European Space Agency, and world science! :up:

Oberon 11-12-14 01:46 PM

Media briefing in about 15 minutes. :yep:

Hopefully some pictures from the surface.

Oberon 11-12-14 02:27 PM

Looks like it's possible that the lander bounced slightly on landing and thus landed twice! :haha: Also it turned ever so slightly before the second touchdown but seems to still be in position for the moment even though the harpoons haven't deployed.
More information should hopefully be available in tomorrows briefing at 14:00CET. No surface pictures yet, apparently they lost contact a little earlier than planned, but it's nothing that they're unduly worried about.

A fantastic day for the ESA, and humanity as a whole. The nice thing about this mission to me, and to others too, is how many nations were involved in it. Goes to show what we can do when we work together. :up:

https://sslimgs.xkcd.com/comics/land...jx7ENjy6ac.png

Bilge_Rat 11-12-14 02:40 PM

This is amazing.

I remember when Halley's Comet last came by in 1986. At that time, no one even knew what a Comet was made of and whether it was even solid.

Noe WE have landed on one. :up:

Skybird 11-12-14 03:54 PM

No doubt that the UFO believers amongst the people living inside that comet must have a "Hey I told you so!"-party-day! :D

Their leaders maybe negotiate meanwhile whether to launch their nuclear missiles at the intruder's point of origin. :-?

And a face-hugger inside its egg wonders: "Heck, what was that? We better check it out."

vienna 11-12-14 05:17 PM

Great, they can calibrate a probe to land on an object 300 million miles away, but the GPS in the car keeps saying "recalculating"...


<O>

Oberon 11-13-14 08:15 AM

Apparently the picture I posted above was just one frame of an animated comic:

http://i.imgur.com/M4wa8Ed.gif

Frame by frame version here: http://xkcd1446.org/#142

Dowly 11-13-14 08:59 AM

^Hah, that's cool. :) Philae's twitter is pretty cool too: https://twitter.com/philae2014

First photo from the comet:
http://www.esa.int/var/esa/storage/i...to_a_comet.jpg

Oberon 11-13-14 09:01 AM

She's definitely on a bit of a wonk there, but at least she's not upside down. :yep:

The main question to be answered at the moment though is, is there enough sunlight to power her? :hmmm:

Jimbuna 11-13-14 10:38 AM

Jobe well done ESA.

Next decision will be whether to attempt re-positioning or get as much info as possible before doing so.

I go for the latter.

Oberon 11-14-14 09:01 PM

Philae has gone to sleep after sending several hours of data stream to Rosetta.

http://sci.esa.int/science-e-media/i...er_625x396.jpg

Goodnight Philae...and thank you. :salute:

Dread Knot 11-15-14 07:47 AM

This remarkable mission must be winding down. It seems the emphasis on the story has shifted to one of the mission physicists choice in tacky shirts.

http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-trending-30055278

He should borrow Bill Murray's line from Ghostbusters; "Back off man, I'm a scientist."

http://i.embed.ly/1/display/resize?k...EXCMAEsUzo.png

Oberon 06-14-15 06:32 AM

http://www.oocities.org/emperor_silu...h/flash130.jpg

PHILAE'S ALIVE!


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-33126885

Dowly 06-14-15 06:57 AM

Welcome back, Philae!


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