ESA Gives Green Light To Rosetta 13
JoeRobe writes "An ESA review board has given the green light for launch of the Rosetta Spacecraft in January 2003. The Rosetta Mission is one of the ESA's boldest missions to date. Over the next eight years, the spacecraft will conduct two asteroid (Otawara and Siwa) flybys and finish off by dropping a lander onto the surface of comet Wirtanen."
Comet Lander (Score:4, Interesting)
This may either confirm or deny the "life seeded by comets" theories you hear in pop science from time to time.
Either way, VERY COOL, if it works.
Cuchullain
Re:Comet Lander (Score:5, Interesting)
If we find organic matter on a comet, then that doesn't mean the only source of organic matter is comets. The only way to truly prove those theories would be to disprove all other possible sources of 'original organic matter.' Finding organic material on a comet would simply prove that comets are a possible source, not that they are the definitive source.
And, arguing in the other direction, even if organic matter isn't found on this particular comet, there are still many others that haven't been checked. Just because one comet doesn't contain organic matter, doesn't mean all comets don't.
Point taken, however... (Score:2, Interesting)
I was mainly spewing out a thinking point, and the fact that I am impressed with the project.
Don't get me wrong about the theory either, I am actually a detractor of the 'Life seeded by comets' theory. I just think it would be uber interesting to find and examine extra-terrestrial life. At least till the lander runs out of power, or out of range.
Cuchullain
its good to see multi function missions (Score:1)
Re:its good to see multi function missions (Score:3, Interesting)
-ac
Change in mass (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Change in mass (Score:1, Informative)
Why is that? Intertia is intertia. It doesn't matter if you are in space or not. The probe's mass is inconsequential to the orbit of the comet they will land on (assuming they can pull it off!) because the comet's mass is orders of magnitude larger. More likely to affect a comet's orbit is the loss of mass due to ablation when it gets close to the sun (and forms a tail and all that).
-ac
-ac
About the Lander part (Score:2, Funny)