Comet lander falls silent, scientists
fear it has moved
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[July 22, 2015]
BERLIN (Reuters) - The Philae comet
lander has fallen silent, European scientists said on Monday, raising
fears that it has moved again on its new home millions of miles from
Earth.
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The fridge-sized robotic lab, which landed on comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in November, last made contact on July 9
and efforts to reach it again have so far failed, experts working
for the historic European Space Agency project said.
The lander - the first mission to land on a comet, this one
traveling as fast as 135,000 kph - initially bounced and landed in a
position too shadowy to power its solar panels.
It woke up in June as the comet moved closer to the sun. But the
latest data suggests something, possibly a gas emission, may have
moved it again, the scientists said.
"The profile of how strongly the sun is falling on which panels has
changed from June to July, and this does not seem to be explained by
the course of the seasons on the comet alone," Stephan Ulamec,
Philae project manager at the DLR German Aerospace Centre said in a
statement.
Philae's antenna may have been obstructed, and one of its
transmitters appears to have stopped working, the team said.
There was no answer to a command sent to activate Philae's ROMAP
instrument to determine the comet's plasma environment and magnetic
field.
Communications between Philae and its Rosetta orbiter are also
tricky because the increasing amounts of dust thrown off by the
comet as it approaches the Sun make it hard for the orbiter to stay
close to the comet, they added.
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Scientists have now sent out a command telling Philae to use just
one transmitter, and have started moving the orbiter to a safer
distance around 170-190 km from the comet
Until July 24, Rosetta will orbit a path that may allow it to
contact the lander and then it will fly over the southern hemisphere
of the comet to observe it with its own 11 instruments.
"Philae is obviously still functional, because it sends us data,
even if it does so at irregular intervals and at surprising times,"
Ulamec said.
(Reporting by Victoria Bryan; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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