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Rosetta at a glance
 
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Rosetta orbiter 'swoops' over the Philae lander soon after its touchdown on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Credits: Astrium - E. Viktor
 
  The orbiter
 
Rosetta: ESA's new comet chaser
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Artist view of ESA's Rosetta cometary probe. The spacecraft is covered with dark thermal insulation in order to keep its warmth while venturing into the coldness of the outer Solar System, beyond Mars orbit.

Selected in November 1993 as a cornerstone mission of ESA's long-term science programme, the Rosetta probe was launched by an Ariane 5 on 2 March 2004, on an 11-year journey to the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Built by EADS Astrium, the Rosetta probe consists of a 3,065-kg spacecraft (1,578-kg dry mass) designed to enter orbit around the comet's nucleus in August 2014 after a series of gravity assist manoeuvres to gain enough orbital energy, with three swing-bys at Earth (March 2005, November 2007 and November 2009) and one at Mars (February 2007). En route to the comet, the probe will flyby the asteroids 2867 Steins (September 2008) and 21 Lutetia (July 2010).

The spacecraft carries 11 science instruments to probe the comet's nucleus and map its surface in fine detail. It will also land a package of instruments (the Philae Lander) to study some of the most primitive, unprocessed material in the Solar System. The mission will provide clues to the physical and chemical processes at work during the formation of planets, beginning 4.6 billion years ago.

Credits: ESA, image by AOES Medialab

 
  The lander
 
Artist's impression of the Rosetta lander
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The Rosetta lander will be released onto Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. It will make the most detailed analysis ever made of a comet's icy nucleus and surface.

Credits: Astrium - E. Viktor
 
  Launch
 
Ariane-5 launch V138
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Launch of Ariane-5 flight V138 from the European Space Centre, Kourou, French Guiana, 19 December 2000.
 
  The journey
 
An artist's impression of the Rosetta orbiter and lander
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This artist's impression shows the Rosetta spacecraft, its lander, and a comet.

Rosetta’s 11-year mission began in 2004, with an Ariane-5 launch from Kourou in French Guiana. The three-tonne spacecraft is on its way towards the outer Solar System.

Credits: ESA 2001

 
  The comet
 
Artist view of the Rosetta lander
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The Philae lander at work on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. While Rosetta studies the comet from close orbit, Philae will obtain measurements from the surface.

Immediately after touchdown in November 2014, a harpoon will be fired to anchor the lander and prevent it from escaping the comet’s extremely weak gravity. The minimum targeted mission time for Philae is one week, but surface operations may continue for many months. The measurements from the Rosetta orbiter will last from August 2014 to the end of 2015.

Credits: ESA / AOES Medialab

 
  The team
 


Credits: ESA - P.Sebirot
 
  Operations
 
ESA antenna
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Radio communications between Rosetta and the ground use a newly developed deep-space antenna which was built by ESA at New Norcia, near Perth in Western Australia. It is operated by Xantic.

Credits: ESA
 


More about...
Rosetta press kitRosetta's journey
Related articles
History of cometary missionsWhy 'Rosetta'?Comets - an introductionLife of a cometHow many comets are there?Where life began
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ESA Science - RosettaArianespaceAstriumDLR
 
 
 
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