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RSS: #comet_67p

#comet_67p

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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 23/12/2016

    Once Upon a Time: The amazing adventures of #Rosetta and #Philae
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/12/23/once-upon-a-time-the-amazing-adventures-of-rosetta-and-philae

    Watch the amazing cartoon adventures of Rosetta and Philae, now back-to-back in one special feature-length production. Find out how Rosetta and Philae first got inspired to visit a comet, and follow them on their incredible ten-year journey through the Solar System to their destination, flying around planets and past asteroids along the way. Watch as Philae tries to land on the comet and deals with some unexpected challenges! Learn about the fascinating observations that Rosetta made as she watched the comet change before her eyes as they got closer to the Sun and then further away again. Finally, wish Rosetta farewell, as she, too, finishes her amazing adventure on the surface of the comet. Keep watching for one last surprise! French version: Italian version: Spanish version: German version (...)

    #Comet_67P #Comets #Fun_stuff #Outreach #video

    • #Rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 23/12/2016

    Impressions of #Rosetta’s legacy
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/12/23/impressions-of-rosettas-legacy

    In September–October 2016, over 200 people contributed to the #rosetta Legacy campaign, sharing stories, images, videos, creations and experiences to convey what the mission had meant to them. We decided to collect all contributions in an e-book, to keep a long-lasting record of the mission’s impact on a variety of public audiences. This publication presents a collection of these outstanding contributions and provides a taste of Rosetta’s legacy for fellow science communicators, scientists and engineers, educators, space enthusiasts – anyone who was fascinated by the mission. The e-book (pdf, 33MB) is available here. Thanks again to everyone who shared with us their impressions of the mission, and to all followers of Rosetta and #Philae (...)

    #Comet_67P #Fun_stuff #Outreach ##rosettalegacy #comet #engagement #inspiration #outreach #philae

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 23/12/2016

    #Rosetta’s complete journey – #animation
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/12/23/rosettas-complete-journey-animation

    Now in one complete animation: #rosetta’s #trajectory around #Comet_67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, from arrival to mission end. The animation begins on 31 July 2014, during Rosetta’s final approach to the comet after its ten-year journey through space. The spacecraft arrived at a distance of 100 km on 6 August, from where it gradually approached the comet and entered initial mapping orbits that were needed to select a #Landing site for Philae. These observations also enabled the first comet science of the mission. The manoeuvres in the lead up to, during and after Philae’s release on 12 November are seen, before Rosetta settled into longer-term science orbits. In February and March 2015 the spacecraft made several flybys. One of the closest triggered a ‘safe mode’ that forced it to retreat (...)

    #Fun_stuff #Operations #video ##CometLanding #flyby #manoeuvre

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 22/12/2016

    #osiris Data Release : March–May 2015
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/12/22/osiris-data-release-march-may-2015

    A new batch of thousands of #Images from #Rosetta's OSIRIS imaging system have been released into ESA’s Archive Image Browser and the Planetary Science Archive. This latest OSIRIS data release comprises 2423 narrow-angle camera #images and 4378 wide-angle camera images from the period 11 March – 24 May 2015. You can browse through the new images in the MTP 014, 015 and 016 albums here. 

    #Comet_67P #Instruments #comet #rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 15/12/2016

    #Rosetta’s last words: #Science descending to a #comet
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/12/15/rosettas-last-words-science-descending-to-a-comet

    On 30 September 2016, at 11:19:37 UT in ESA’s mission control, #rosetta’s signal flat-lined, confirming that the spacecraft had completed its incredible mission on the surface of #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko some 40 minutes earlier and 720 million km from Earth. Rosetta was working up to the very end, collecting reams of #science data as it descended towards a region of pits in the Ma’at region on the comet’s ‘head’. Before we ‘retire’ the blog, we wanted to catch up with the instrument teams following this grand finale to find out how their #Instruments performed and if there were any surprises in Rosetta’s last ‘words’ from the comet. First a reminder of the impact site: Rosetta was targeting a point within a 700 x 500 m ellipse, between two pits in the Ma’at region. Reconstruction of the (...)

    #Images #Landing #Operations ##CometLanding #instruments #landing_day

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 17/11/2016

    Icy surprises at #Rosetta’s #comet
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/11/17/icy-surprises-at-rosettas-comet

    This article is mirrored from the main ESA Web Portal. #rosetta’s comet approached its most active period last year, the spacecraft spotted carbon dioxide ice – never before seen on a comet – followed by the emergence of two unusually large patches of #water_ice. The carbon dioxide ice layer covered an area comparable to the size of a football pitch, while the two water ice patches were each larger than an Olympic swimming pool and much larger than any signs of water ice previously spotted at the comet. The three icy layers were all found in the same region, on the comet’s southern hemisphere. A combination of the complex shape of the comet, its elongated path around the Sun and the substantial tilt of its spin, seasons are spread unequally between the two hemispheres of the double-lobed (...)

    #Comet_67P #Images #Instruments #Science #activity #co2_ice #colour #osiris #VIRTIS

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 14/11/2016

    Space Science Image of the Week: #navcam close-ups
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/11/14/space-science-image-of-the-week-navcam-close-ups

    A trio of the closest NAVCAM #Images of #Comet_67P-Churyumov Gerasimenko is featured as our ESA Space Science Image of the Week. During the last few weeks of its mission at #comet 67P/C–G, the Rosetta spacecraft ventured closer than it had ever been to the surface of the nucleus. Eventually, it came to rest on the small lobe of the comet in a daring descent on 30 September 2016. No navigation images were taken during the descent; the last five NAVCAM images were taken several hours earlier, between about 20 and 17 km from the comet centre. This montage features the three closest images of the comet’s surface taken by #Rosetta's navigation camera – acquired in the first half of September. The left image in the composite (also shown below) was taken on 8 September, some 2.6 from the comet surface. (...)

    #CometWatch ##CometWatch #boulders #rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 11/11/2016

    An encounter with #Klim_Churyumov
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/11/11/an-encounter-with-klim-churyumov

    Two years ago this week, the entire world was getting ready for a historic endeavour in space: the first soft #Landing of a human-made probe on a #comet. On 12 November 2014, #Rosetta's lander #Philae landed on #Comet_67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, and while the landing didn’t go exactly as planned, Philae finally managed to secure itself to the nucleus and to conduct a series of scientific experiments in situ, while Rosetta kept observing the comet from a distance until the mission’s end last September. As communicators of ESA’s #Science missions, we gathered at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany, to follow Philae’s landing and report it via ESA’s web and social media. During the week, ESOC was packed with scientists and engineers from the Rosetta and Philae (...)

    #Comets #On_this_day ##CometLanding

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 10/11/2016

    #Rosetta #legacy winner announced
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/11/10/rosetta-legacy-winner-announced

    Between 6 September and 7 October 2016, we collected 235 contributions to the #rosetta Legacy tumblr. A huge and sincere thank you to all participants who shared experiences, stories and images of how the mission of Rosetta and #Philae to #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko has inspired their lives, including study and career choices, artistic practice and other creative endeavours! The authenticity and ingenuity of the submitted entries was overwhelming, and it has been challenging to pick one top prize winner (apologies for the delay!). One entry in particular caught the attention of the ESA judges for the combination of creative effort and motivation, so we selected Cristina Romero from Spain as the top prize winner. The prize consists in a special visit to #estec, ESA’s technical heart in (...)

    #Fun_stuff #Outreach #competition

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 20/10/2016

    Last NAVCAM archive release
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/10/20/last-navcam-archive-release

    The last batch of NAVCAM #Images taken by #Rosetta during the final month of its incredible mission at #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko have been released to the Archive Image Browser. The image set covers the period 2-30 September when the spacecraft was on elliptical orbits that sometimes brought it to within 2 km of the comet’s surface (watch this video for a reminder of #rosetta's ’end of mission’ orbits). The archive release also includes the final five NAVCAM images that were published on 30 September, taken shortly after the spacecraft’s collision manoeuvre was executed on 29 September. The new image sets can be found in folders MTP034 and (...)

    #CometWatch ##CometWatch

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 7/10/2016

    #CometWatch from #kepler
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/10/07/cometwatch-from-kepler

    During the last month of #Rosetta's operations at #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, it was no longer possible to observe the #comet with telescopes on Earth because it was too close to the Sun’s position in the sky and therefore not visible in the night-time. Fortunately, NASA’s Kepler space observatory stepped in, taking #Images of the comet every 30 minutes from 7 to 20 September, providing important context to #rosetta's in situ measurements. A world-class exoplanet hunter, Kepler is now in its second mission, called K2, which started on 30 May 2014. While still looking for exoplanets, it is now performing observations along the ecliptic and so observing a wealth of Solar System objects, from large bodies like Neptune and Pluto to smaller ones, like #Comets. For example, it took #images (...)

    #Science #space_telescope

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 3/10/2016

    #Rosetta impact site named Sais
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/10/03/rosetta-impact-site-named-sais

    In case you missed it during our live coverage on Friday, #rosetta's impact site has been named Sais. Mission Manager Patrick Martin announced the name of the impact site after contact with the #comet's surface was confirmed and the mission declared complete. He said: “The Rosetta Stone was originally located in Sais, and we shall name the impact point as such so we can finally say that Rosetta has come home to Sais.” The mission was named after the Rosetta Stone, itself so named because it was found in a town called Rashid (Rosetta), having thought to have been moved there from a temple in a town called Sais. Rosetta’s last image of the comet surface is highlighted today as Space #Science Image of the Week.   

    #Comet_67P #Images #Landing #Operations ##CometLanding

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 3/10/2016

    Alice’s last spectra
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/10/03/alices-last-spectra

    We were happy to spot this tweet from #Rosetta's Alice instrument Principal Investigator Alan Stern over the weekend, showing the final spectrograph image obtained by the instrument moments before #rosetta impacted on to the surface of the comet on Friday: Heading bk from Germany & the end of Rosetta’s flight mission. Our Alice UV spectrograph’s final image: made minutes b4 touchdown. #Proud pic.twitter.com/dLtvhtrKRl — AlanStern (@AlanStern) October 1, 2016 We exchanged a brief email with Alan yesterday, who confirmed: "The spectrum shows the reflectance of the surface at close range with ~3m resolution — which is unprecedented for ultraviolet studies of comets." Congratulations Alice! We’re looking forward to hearing more from the various instrument teams in due course as to what (...)

    #Comet_67P #Instruments #Science ##CometLanding ##LivingWithAComet #science

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 1/10/2016

    Mission Complete
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/10/01/mission-complete

    Mission complete: #Rosetta’s journey ends in daring descent to comet ESA’s historic Rosetta mission has concluded as planned, with the controlled impact onto the comet it had been investigating for more than two years. Read the press release on the ESA website.

    #Comet_67P #Landing

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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  • @rosetta
    Rosetta blog @rosetta 30/09/2016

    #Rosetta’s #Landing site
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/30/rosettas-landing-site

    Here’s a sequence of #Images captured by #rosetta during its descent to the surface of #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on 30 September.

    #Instruments ##CometLanding #comet #images #osiris

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 30/09/2016

    #comet landing descent image – 51m
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/30/comet-landing-descent-image-51-m

    This is #Rosetta's last image of #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, taken shortly before impact, an estimated 51 m above the surface. The image was taken with the #osiris wide-angle camera on 30 September 2016. The image scale is about 5 mm/pixel and the image measures about 2.4 m across.

    #Ground-based_observations #Images #Instruments ##CometLanding #rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 30/09/2016

    Comet #Landing descent image – 1.2 km
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/30/comet-landing-descent-image-1-2-km

    Rosetta’s descent continues. Here’s an OSIRIS narrow-angle camera #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko captured at 10:14 GMT from an altitude of about 1.2 km on 30 September. The image scale is about 2.3 cm/pixel and the image measures about 33 m across.

    #Images #Instruments #Rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 30/09/2016

    #comet #Landing descent image – 11.7 km
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/30/comet-landing-descent-image-11-7-km

    During #Rosetta's final descent, which is currently undergoing, the #osiris narrow-angle camera captured this image of #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko at 05:25 GMT from an altitude of about 11.7 km. With dramatic shadows, the image shows the comet’s ’neck’ region, with the smooth terrains of Hapi on the right and the rougher Hathor on the left. The image scale is about 22 cm/pixel and the image measures about 450 m across.

    #Images #Instruments ##CometLanding #images #rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 30/09/2016

    #comet #Landing descent image – 8.9 km
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/30/comet-landing-descent-image-8-9-km

    As #Rosetta gets closer and closer to Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the #osiris narrow-angle camera captured this beautifully detailed image of the comet surface at 06:53 GMT from an altitude of about 8.9 km. The image shows a portion of the small comet lobe, with portion of the rough Hathor region (top right) and smoother Ma’at (bottom left). The image scale is about 17 cm/pixel and the image measures about 350 m across.

    #Comet_67P #Images #Instruments ##CometLanding #images #rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 30/09/2016

    Descent images begin!
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/30/descent-images-begin

    We’ve started to get images from #Rosetta's descent. This one was taken by the OSIRIS narrow-angle camera at 01:20 UT, from a distance of around 16 km. The image scale is about 30 cm/pixel and the image measures about 614 m across.

    #Comet_67P #Landing ##CometLanding #rosetta

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 29/09/2016

    #Rosetta #legacy Highlights
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/29/rosetta-legacy-highlights

    Over the past two years, the #rosetta mission has captured the imagination of many people worldwide, stimulating them to produce art and music, and to undertake other creative activities with friends and families – some even made further education or career choices inspired by the mission. This #video features a selection of contributions that were shared on the Rosetta Legacy tumblr before 21 September 2016: We also asked some of the contributors to tells us more about how the mission influenced their study, career and life in general: The Rosetta Legacy campaign will run until 7 October 2016. Share your stories, images and videos on ▻http://rosetta-legacy.tumblr.com and be in with a chance to win spot prizes (Rosetta and #Philae plush toys) and a visit at ESA’s ESTEC as top prize. 

    #Audio #Comet_67P #Comets_and_culture #Fun_stuff #Landing #Outreach #Wake_up #citizens #comet #inspiration #outreach #philae

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 29/09/2016

    Beneath the surface of #Comet_67P
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/29/beneath-the-surface-of-comet-67p

    While scientists and the public alike have been astounded by the unexpected shape of Comet 67P/ Churyumov-Gerasimenko’s nucleus, what lies beneath the surface is just as important scientifically. Comet interiors preserve a unique record from the formation of the Solar System 4.6 billion years ago. Reaching that information was one of the key tasks of #Rosetta and #Philae. There were two principal experiments designed to ’see’ inside the comet’s nucleus: the COmet Nucleus Sounding Experiment by Radio-wave Transmission (CONSERT) instrument and the Radio #Science Investigation (RSI). Comets are known to be mixtures of dust and ice. Yet puzzlingly, measurements show that 67P/C-G’s density is much lower than ice. This means the comet has a high porosity, and could be an indicator that there (...)

    #Instruments

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 29/09/2016

    A comet’s life – a new #sonification from #Rosetta’s #rpc data
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/29/a-comets-life-a-new-sonification-from-rosettas-rpc-data

    In 2014, shortly after Rosetta’s arrival at #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the magnetometer on the Rosetta #plasma Consortium (RPC) suite of #Instruments, #RPC-Mag, detected some surprising oscillations in the plasma surrounding the nucleus, revealing the comet’s mysterious “song”. Now, after two years of monitoring the plasma around the comet, the RPC team present a new song based on data collected during the entire mission, describing the comet’s evolution from the point of view of Rosetta’s magnetometer. While the nucleus of Comet 67P/C-G is itself not magnetised, as measured by plasma instruments on both Rosetta and the lander Philae, it is embedded in the interplanetary #magnetic_field carried throughout the Solar System by the solar wind – a continuous flow of electrically charged (...)

    #Audio #Fun_stuff #Science #diamagnetic_cavity #music #singing_comet #waves

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 29/09/2016

    #comet Landscapes and #maps of the #southern_hemisphere
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/29/comet-landscapes

    During today’s #Science briefing at ESA’s ESOC, Mohamed El-Maarry (University of Bern) presented a series of highlights about the landscape of #Comet_67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Over the past two years, #Rosetta mapped the entire surface of the comet at high-resolution, resolving very small features and monitoring surface changes with time. The comet nucleus is indeed very dark (see our 2014 blog post NAVCAM’s shades of grey), reflecting only about 4% of the light that hits it. But why is it so dark? Measurements from both #rosetta and Philae report that most of the surface is dry (with the exception of icy boulders) and covered in organic material, most of which had never been detected on the surface of a comet (on this topic, see previous blog posts: Extremely dark, dry and rich in (...)

    #Images #Instruments #images #morphology #osiris #regions

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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    Rosetta blog @rosetta 29/09/2016

    #Science #highlights briefing starting soon
    ▻http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2016/09/29/science-highlights-briefing-starting-soon

    The #Rosetta #science highlight briefing at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt, Germany, will start shortly. Tune in from 14:30 14:45 to the livestream viewer at #rosetta.esa.int or via ▻https://livestream.com/ESA/rosettagrandfinale or ESA’s Facebook page to follow dedicated talks celebrating the scientific highlights of the mission. Programme overview Matt Taylor (ESA’s Rosetta Project Scientist): Introduction Mohamed El-Maarry (OSIRIS team, University of Bern): Landscapes of Chury Valerie Ciarletti (CONSERT team, Universités Paris-Saclay): Getting the ground truth about the nucleus Thurid Mannel (MIDAS team, University of Graz): Dust under the microscope Jean-Baptiste Vincent (OSIRIS team, Max-Planck Institute for Solar Physics, Göttingen): Cometary activity and (...)

    #Comet_67P #Comets #Instruments #Philae #comet #consert #MIDAS #osiris #rosina #rpc

    Rosetta blog @rosetta
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Thèmes liés

  • #rosetta
  • #comet
  • #comet_67p/churyumov-gerasimenko
  • #images
  • #rosetta
  • #cometwatch
  • #navcam
  • #instruments
  • #science
  • #rosetta’s
  • #comets
  • technology: esa
  • #osiris
  • #comet_67p
  • #landing
  • #cometlanding
  • #science
  • #rosetta's
  • #instruments
  • #philae
  • #comet_67p/churyumov–gerasimenko
  • #operations
  • #fun_stuff
  • #philae
  • #rosetta’s
  • #rosetta's
  • #imhotep
  • #comet’s
  • #activity
  • #images
  • #trajectory
  • industryterm: web portal
  • #comet's
  • #boulders
  • #video
  • #outreach
  • #southern_hemisphere
  • country: germany
  • #ground-based_observations
  • #water