Showing posts with label alien Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alien Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Philae Lander Post-Perihelion To Awaken - http://clapway.com/2015/08/13/philae-lander-post-perihelion-101/

Scientists of European persuasion have made an important change of plans for the Philae lander , a detached component of the Rosetta spacecraft with a spotty service record. The Europeans are now hopeful of retrieving new imagery and data on drill samples as soon as communications are restored.


WHY DOES PHILAE PERFORM BADLY?


This may be a misrepresentation of the facts; Philae was impeccably designed, and is fully capable of performing its duties, but upon beginning its final descent last November, the lander had a few issues, bounced on the surface several times, and came to rest in a small valley. Since the lander is solar powered, the absence of sunlight precludes its operating at full capacity, causing it to go into hibernation mode periodically.


SUMMER’S DELIVERY


But in June, the tenacious lander reawoke, much to scientists at the European Space Agency’s surprise, and caused the ESA to rush plans for Philae to perform as many experiments as possible before they risked the more dangerous drilling experiment.


However, as mentioned above, because of Philae’s position, periodic black outs are to be expected. “The problem is not power, but communications,” Aurelie Moussi from space agency CNES said in a webcast on Thursday. “We have to find something to do in a shorter duration.”


PHILAE EXPECTED TO UNVEIL MYSTERIES OF LIFE


Scientists are hopeful that new samples from comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko’s surface will yield more insight into the fundamentals of planet formation, and how such a frigid and hostile environment can be host to the complex organic compounds capable of seeding life.


The Rosetta spacecraft has spent the past two weeks studying a part of the comet inaccessible to Philae, but as of August 11th the mother probe has returned to its position above Philae, and is awaiting its signal.


PHILAE IS DAMAGED


So far, no more contact between the two machines has been documented, but Barbara Cozzoni, Philae operations engineer laments that this may be because one of the lander’s transmitters is broken, along with two receivers that refuse to function properly.


THE BEST IS YET TO COME


Since the comet passed through its perihelion phase at 185 million kilometers (roughly 115 million miles) from the sun, activity on the comet has picked up drastically. Just as the hottest day of the year occurs after the summer solstice, so too will comet 67P’s most active day follow its perihelion. As of now, the comet is ejecting nearly 1,000 kg of dust and a volume of water sufficient to fill two bathtubs per second. Comparatively, upon Rosetta’s original rendezvous, comet 67P was losing only two small glasses of water per second.


In addition to this increased loss of matter and H20, magnificently powerful gas jets were also observed shooting from the comet’s surface. But this spectacle is sideshow to what Philae may reveal to us, soon.



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Philae Lander Post-Perihelion To Awaken

Monday, July 6, 2015

Will the Rosetta Mission to Philae give us proof of alien life form? - http://clapway.com/2015/07/06/organic-alien-life-forms-believed-to-be-inhabiting-philae-comet-123/

Ever since the Rosetta Mission began, scientist have been wondering what we could take away from such an undertaking. Is one takeaway alien life forms? Speculation arose about whether a mission of this nature was even possible, but since 1993 when the project first began many of the beliefs of those scientists who believed in what was thought to be impossible have been espoused.


Now a few key scientists working with the project have stepped forward stating that there is a real possibility of organic alien life forms on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, and are set to explain their ideas at today’s National Astronomy Meeting, in Llandundno, Wales, Monday July 6th, 2015.


Explanations for this comet in particular transporting microbial life forms


Dr. Max Wallis and Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe believe have presumed that there is life within the comet that we are researching, and their assumptions are based in what they have been able to study thus far. They have argued that the mixture that the surface which has been shown to be composed of ice like seas, likely supports a population of organic alien life forms.


Alien Organic Life Believed to Be Inhabiting Philae Comet - Clapway


 


Dr. Wallis explains the likelihood that the comet contains some type of organic matter, “Rosetta has already shown that the comet is not to be seen as a deep-frozen inactive body, but supports geological processes and could be more hospitable to alien life forms than our Arctic and Antarctic regions.” Dr. Wallis believes that due to what has already been discovered, the composition of the comet is more equipped to support life than the most inhospitable places on our planet which are known to contain various kinds of life forms.


A small window to complete research


Rosetta’s mission on the comet will draw to a close in December 2015, giving the scientists less than a year to wrap up any research before the comet heads deep into outer space. Dr. Wallis and Professor Wickramasinghe will present their findings to a group of professionals from around the world today. Unfortunately for the two researchers, the lander that is riding on the comet right now is not equipped with anything which would allow them to analyze or take samples to determine if there is in fact organic alien life on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, so any of their conjectures will be difficult to prove.



 


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Organic Alien Life Forms Believed to Be Inhabiting Philae Comet