No thrusters and a very gentle landing.I'm a bit surprised by the lack of dust thrown up. I expected Philae to generate quite a cloud of dust that would have taken hours to disperse.
Sorry I may be butting in, but I can't believe that Philae bounced off! Insanity! If they wasted 10 years of work, it would be an understatement to say that I was sorry for them.
Of course - and there is no reason (gradient, edges, other surface features) to assume, that the lander is not upright and the large back area is no shadow. <snip>
I would hesitate to make those assumptions. It would be rather amazing if the shadow were being cast in such a way as to leave the landing leg perfectly lit, while being so shallow in angle that no pebbles or protrusions escaped shadow.
Sure - but it is also no reason to assume the opposite. We in the forum have not more data than the scientists and even the scientists have no precise idea right now.
- They do not yet know exactly where Philae landed (more on that below).
- After the initial impact, they rebounded at about 38 centimeters per second -- about a third of their 1-meter-per-second impact velocity.
- They saw rotation for about 2 hours after impact, and then rotation stopped (this was while the spacecraft was on its long first bounce).
- They lost the link about 30 minutes after its final touchdown.
- The solar panels are only getting illuminated for 1.5 hours of each 12-hour comet day, which is much, much less than they need in order to keep the lander going after its batteries run out.
- Contrary to earlier reports, the solar panels are not damaged.
- Rosetta is operating nominally; the network systems and overall ground segment to control the mission are nominal
- Last night, Rosetta lost contact with Philae as expected when it orbited below the horizon just after 20:00 CET.
- Contact was re-established this morning at 06:01 UTC / 07:01 CET, and the Philae-Rosetta radio link was initially unstable.
- As Rosetta rose higher above the Philae landing site, the link became very stable and the lander could transmit telemetry (status and housekeeping information) and science data from the surface.
- This morning's surface link was again lost due to Rosetta's orbit at about 09:58 UTC / 10:58 CET. Ignacio explains that with the current orbit, Rosetta will have, typically, two Philae communication windows per day.
- The next window opens at 19:27 UTC on the spacecraft and runs through to 23:47 UTC spacecraft time.
Where did Philae land? Its initial impact point is precisely located within the red square. Its final landing location is not yet known, but CONSERT radar sounder data suggests it is somewhere within the blue diamond.
Is that a gas jet the upper portion of the image?
Curiosity has its own LEDs for nighttime observations. That's not as practical for a solar powered spacecraft and one that was supposed to land on flat terrain.Gosh, it's really dark. Make sure to bring a camera with flash when visiting a comet.
When the battery gets near dying, I hope they try a few more times to start the thruster and maybe, without harpoons or screws, that could spring the lander back up to land in a new location? Maybe?![]()
Philae will try to deploy MUPUS to expose its solar panels better. The drill, SD2, will likely be used at the end of the lander's battery life because there's nothing to lose. I recall that the thruster problem had no chance of being resolved so the team went ahead with the landing in the first place.The gravity is so low, if they have anything that can produce some vertical kickback, like a hammer or something like that, they'd be off the surface... We're talking about surface gravity in the single digit cm/s range...
Could they roll across the surface KSP style with the reaction wheels?