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IRON AND ICE
Comet probe 'may revive in March': French space chief
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Jan 05, 2015


A probe that made the first landing on a comet but fell silent when its battery ran down may revive with sunlight in March, France's space chief said Monday.

"The Philae saga is going to continue," Jean-Yves Le Gall, head of the National Centre for Space Studies (CNES), told journalists in Paris, referring to the robot lab perched on the dusty iceball zipping through space.

The 100-kilogramme (220-pound) European probe landed on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on November 12 after a 10-year trek piggybacking on its mother ship, Rosetta.

But the operation did not go smoothly. Philae bounced twice on the icy surface before settling at an angle in the shadow of a cliff.

It had enough power in an onboard battery for around 60 hours of experiments, but not enough light to sustain its solar panels and carry on working.

On November 15, out of juice, the lander went into standby mode.

But the situation could change as Comet "C-G" draws closer to the Sun, Le Gall said.

"We hope that from March, the sunlight will help the robot to recharge its batteries and resume its scientific work," he said.

Scientists resorted to every trick to tease data from Philae's 10 instruments before the shutdown.

But a great bonus would be if the lander can monitor the comet when it reaches its closest and hottest point to the Sun.

"We are hoping to get real-time experience at perihelion, on August 13," said Le Gall. "I am sure we'll see things that we never imagined."

Knowing exactly where Philae is would help mission managers calculate its chances of resuming duties.

"We have a rough idea of where it is, but we still haven't seen it," Marc Pircher, head of the Toulouse space centre, told AFP explaining that Rosetta's Osiris camera had been tasked for the search.


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IRON AND ICE
Comet probe in race against time to crown stellar feat
Paris (AFP) Nov 14, 2014
Europe's deep-space robot lab Philae worked against the clock Friday, attempting to drill into a comet 510 million kilometres (320 million miles) from Earth to crown a historic exploration before its battery runs out. Charged with 60 hours of onboard power, the lander bounced twice after touchdown Wednesday, settling in a crevice in a mystery location, shadowed from battery-boosting sunlight ... read more


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