Timeline of comet probe's 12-year odyssey

The comet-chasing probe Rosetta is performing a final manoeuvre that will end its 12-year mission with a crash-landing on the comet's surface.

KEY MOMENTS IN ROSETTA'S MISSION

March 2, 2004: Europe's unmanned probe Rosetta takes off from Kourou, French Guiana, after a series of delays, including an abandoned January 2003 launch window because of a rocket problem.

February 25, 2007: Rosetta carries out a close flyby of Mars. European Space Agency's mission control breaks out in applause after the end of 15 tense minutes of radio silence as the craft passes behind the Red Planet.

September 5, 2008: Probe successfully passes close to an asteroid 400 million kilometres from earth. The spacecraft loses its radio signal for 90 minutes as planned during the flyby of the Steins asteroid, also known as Asteroid 2867.

July 10, 2010: Between Mars and Jupiter, Rosetta transmits its first pictures from the largest asteroid ever visited by a satellite after it flies by Lutetia as close as 3200 kilometres. It is the closest look to date at the Lutetia asteroid.

January 20, 2014: Waking after almost three years of hibernation, Rosetta sends its first signal back to earth. Systems had been powered down in 2011 to conserve energy, leaving scientists in the dark for 31 months.

August 6, 2014: Rosetta swings alongside comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko somewhere between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

November 12, 2014: The probe releases the Philae lander and it drops to the comet's surface. Seven hours later, Philae touches down on the comet.

November 15, 2014: Philae goes into hibernation after performing experiments and sending data back to Earth for 60 hours.

February 14, 2015: Rosetta swoops to a distance of just 6 kilometres above the surface of the comet to take close-up pictures of the surface.

June 11, 2015: Scientists say they may have caught a glimpse of Philae, whose exact location remains unknown. After analysing images and other data collected over the past months they identified several possible sites including one bright spot described as "a good candidate for the lander".

June 13, 2015: Philae communicates with earth for the first time in seven months in a sign that it has come out of hibernation.

July 9, 2015: Last contact with Philae.

August 13, 2015: Comet 67P reaches the closest point to the sun on its six-year orbit, with Rosetta by its side.

October 28, 2015: Scientists announce that they have detected significant amounts of molecular oxygen coming out of a comet, an unexpected discovery that calls into questions earlier assumptions underlying the search for alien life.

September 5, 2016: Scientists say they have finally located the position of the Philae lander in a "dark crack" on the side of the comet.

September 29, 2016: Mission controllers send their last command to Rosetta, putting it on a collision course with 67P, its final resting place, hours later.


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Source: AAP



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