Quite the bounce, actuallyOh my:
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I like to imagine Philae screaming "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA" while slowly spinning for the whole two hours.
Spaaaaaaaaaaaaaaace
Honestly, I'm surprised to read they've run the drill. Has she moved any as a result?
https://twitter.com/Philae2014/status/533393729156308992Also my rotation was successful (35 degrees). Looks like a whole new comet from this angle![]()
https://twitter.com/Philae2014/status/533403430489178112So much hard work.. getting tired... my battery voltage is approaching the limit soon now

I recall it was mentioned during the briefing that Philae may be able to partially reactivate when it's much closer to the sun than anticipated due to its location. I haven't watched the entire briefing so I'll need to do that.At this point the batteries might recharge, but very, very slowly due to the limited exposure. What is interesting is that this *might* protect Philae as it approaches the Sun later.
So they got mass spectrometry results then? I thought that was one of the primary experiments. In fact, it seems like they've pretty much got everything they wanted out of it.
As with everything from the moon landing to the death of Elvis, an alternative version of “what really happened” as the Philae probe landed on comet 67P did not take long to emerge.
(...)
According to an email published on the website UFOSightingsDaily.com – which does a regular trade in alien sightings – this mission is part of a European Space Agency and Nasa cover-up to disguise the comet’s true alien nature. The email, allegedly from a secret whistle-blowing employee of the ESA, accuses the agency of “blatant cover-ups” in wanting to land on the speeding comet and attaches photos which claim to reveal the “true inner workings of Comet 67P”.