Hosted by Dailymotion. For legal issues report at the Copyright Center, report us on DMC, or use the Instant Removal tool.
Rosetta - advancing cometary science
1 Views • Sep 09, 2016
Description
This film showcases some of the Rosetta’s scientific highlights before the orbiter shuts down operations and joins Philae on the surface of the comet on 30 September. This includes findings by the OSIRIS, VIRTIS, ROSINA and ALICE instruments. The mission results so far have made scientists rethink our picture of comets as dirty snowballs due to a lack of strong evidence for ice on the comet surface. Instead the ice is buried beneath the surface, covered by a layer of dust. This dust layer means that the comet is very dark, only reflecting a few per cent of the light that falls on it.
Although the spacecraft mission will end, the data obtained by Rosetta will provide enough work to keep scientists busy for decades.
The film includes interviews with Joel PARKER, Principal Investigator, ALICE instrument (English); Laurence O’ROURKE, Rosetta downlink science operations manager, European Space Astronomy Centre, ESA (English).
More about the Rosetta mission:
http://rosetta.esa.int
Keywords & Tags
More from User
Earth from Space: Sagaing Division, Myanmar
European Space Agency, ESA
Launching satellites from Space Station – step one
European Space Agency, ESA
Spacewalker’s view
European Space Agency, ESA
Launching satellites from Space Station – step two
European Space Agency, ESA
Introducing ESA’s new astronaut Matthias Maurer
European Space Agency, ESA
Ariane 6
European Space Agency, ESA
Related Videos
Earth from Space: Advancing science through CCI
European Space Agency, ESA
ESAHangout: Rosetta science and countdown to comet landing
European Space Agency, ESA
Rosetta orbiting the comet
European Space Agency, ESA
Highlights: Rosetta mission comet landing up to lander separation
European Space Agency, ESA
ESA Euronews - Rosetta: The Comet Hunter Awakes
European Space Agency, ESA
ESA's comet chaser Rosetta revisits Earth
European Space Agency, ESA