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11-11-2014, 09:53 PM | #1 |
Article 4 Free Inhabitant
Join Date: Jan 2013
First Name: The Other Adam
Location: Satellite Beach
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Comet Landing
Tomorrow at approximately 11am EST, the ESA will attempt to land the probe “Philae” on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. This has been a 10yr mission in the making, they will release the probe and the gravity of the comet will hopefully pull the probe down to land.
You can watch the ESA live stream at the link below, it's just before 8pm in Cali and I just got to see a guy at the ESA command center sneeze, isn't technology amazing! For the first time in history, scientists are attempting to make physical contact with a comet. A 10-year project by the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft will culminate on Wednesday when scientists attempt to land a probe on a comet for the first time ever. The final stage of the mission — actually landing the probe on the comet — has been described as “seven hours of terror” by a scientist involved with the project, and that terror is about to begin. The actual touchdown of the probe “Philae” on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is scheduled to take place just before 11o a.m. EST / 8:00 a.m. PST on Wednesday, and the attempt is being streamed live, as are the events leading up to tomorrow’s landing. Do you want to watch history being made (or agonizing heartbreak in the event the landing fails)? ESA is streaming the mission live from space, and the video is embedded below. Here’s the full schedule of events, courtesy of The Verge:
http://new.livestream.com/ESA/cometlanding |
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