ESA Gives Green Light To Rosetta
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."
I wonder what kind of biological, or pre-biological materials we will find on the comet?
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
"If sharing a thing in no way diminishes it, it is not rightly owned if it is not shared." -St. Augustine
Will the pilot of the lander be chosen by the Lunar Lander game? I sure hope this lander has better controls... ;)
actually, the exact opposite arguement is what led to NASA's "faster-better-cheaper" philosophy when Goldin was administrator. Missions like Voyager, Galileo, Cassini, and Mars Observer packed a heck of a lot into a single mission in terms of science. That made them very expensive (quite the opposite of economical to be sure!). The "faster-better-cheaper" idea was that multiple, more focused missions (less science per mission) was more economical and prudent (not all your eggs in one basket).
-ac
True enough. But discovering biological material, especially active or vigorous material, would lend credence to the theory. I suppose I phrased my comment badly, as I didn't really mean "PROVE" in the full scientific sense.
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
"If sharing a thing in no way diminishes it, it is not rightly owned if it is not shared." -St. Augustine