The
Rosetta space probe, energized with solar power, is to meet up Wednesday with Comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. It will begin making observations, relaying back to
Earth high-resolution images and information from its sensors, of the two-and-a-half
mile wide comet Rosetta will subsequently send a lander down to the comet that will
drill into it and perform a variety of experiments. For a year, Rosetta will
fly alongside the comet, named after the two Ukranian astronomers who
discovered it in 1969.
For
decades, the United States and the Soviet Union, and now Russia, stressed the
use of atomic energy as a source of power in space—and there have been
accidents as a result.
The most serious
were the falls back to Earth of a U.S. satellite with a SNAP-9A plutonium-238
radioisotope thermal generator on board in 1964, disintegrating as it fell, dispersing
plutonium worldwide, and of the Soviet Cosmos Satellite 954 in 1978, with an
atomic reactor on board, also breaking up, and spreading nuclear debris for
hundreds of miles across the Northwest Territories of Canada.
The late Dr.
John Gofman, professor of medical physics at the University of California at
Berkeley, long connected the SNAP-9A accident and its dispersal of plutonium
with a global increase in lung cancer. Canada demanded compensation for the
Cosmos-954 accident which the Soviet Union eventually paid, in part.
Now all
satellites are solar-powered as is the International Space Station. But there
has been a push to continue to use nuclear power on space probes with NASA and formerly
Soviet and now Russian space authorities insisting that solar power cannot be
harvested far from the Sun.
However, the
European Space Agency declares on its website—http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Rosetta/Frequently_asked_questions —“The solar cells in Rosetta’s
solar panels are based on a completely new technology, so-called Low-intensity
Low Temperature Cells. Thanks to them, Rosetta is the first space mission to
journey beyond the main asteroid belt relying solely on solar cells for power
generation. Previous deep-space missions used nuclear RTGs, radioisotope
thermal generators. The new solar cells allow Rosetta to operate over 800
million kilometres from the Sun, where levels of sunlight are only 4% those on
Earth. The technology will be available for future deep-space, such as ESA’s
upcoming Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer.”
ESA
notes: “ESA has not developed RTG i.e. nuclear technology, so the agency
decided to develop solar cells that could fill the same function.”
Rosetta,
launched in 2004, “relies entirely on the energy provided by its innovative
solar panels for all onboard instruments and subsystems,” says ESA.
NASA has begun
to follow ESA’s lead. It went with solar
power for its Juno mission to Jupiter that is now underway. Launched in 2011,
energized by solar power, the Juno space probe is to arrive at Jupiter in 2016.
At the distance
at which Rosetta will encounter Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko or at which
Juno will be doing experiments involving Jupiter or ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons
Explorer will work, energy from the Sun is but a small fraction of what it is
on Earth. Still, it can be effectively utilized. (NASA’s last space probe mission to Jupiter,
Galileo, launched in 1989, was plutonium-powered and NASA officials insisted,
including in sworn testimony countering a challenge to Galileo in federal
court, that this was the only energy choice. There were numerous protests
against Galileo and have been to subsequent nuclear space shots led by the
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space (www.space4peace.org).
Rosetta is named
after the Rosetta Stone, a slab of basalt found in Egypt in 1799 with
inscriptions carved on it that enabled the deciphering of hieroglyphics, the
ancient language of Egypt. “As a result of this breakthrough, scholars were
able to piece together the history of a lost culture,” notes ESA.
Likewise,
“Rosetta’s prime objective is to help understand the origin and evolution of
the Solar System,” says ESA. “The comet’s composition reflects the composition
of the pre-solar nebula out of which the Sun and the planets of the Solar
System formed, more than 4.6 billion years ago. Therefore, an in-depth analysis
of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko by Rosetta and its lander will provide
essential information to understand how the Solar System formed.”
ESA adds, “There
is convincing evidence that comets played a key role in the evolution of the
planets, because cometary impacts are known to have been much more common in
the early Solar System than today. Comets, for example, probably brought much
of the water in today’s ocean. They could even have provided the complex
organic molecules that may have played a crucial role in the evolution of life
on Earth.”
Rosetta “will be
undertaking several ‘firsts’ in space exploration,” says ESA. “It will be the
first mission to orbit and land on a comet.” And, Rosetta will be “the first
spacecraft to witness, at close proximity” the changes in a comet as it
approaches the Sun. Rosetta’s lander “will obtain the first images from a
comet’s surface and make the first in-situ subsurface analysis of its
composition.”
The Rosetta
lander, given the name Philea, is to touch down on the comet’s surface in
November and “remain operational through the end of 2015....A drilling system
will obtain samples down to 23 cm below the surface and will feed these to the
spectrometers for analysis, such as to determine the chemical composition.
Other instruments will measure properties such as near-surface strength,
density, texture, porosity, ice phases and thermal properties...In addition,
instruments on the lander will study how the comet changes during the day-night
cycle, and while it approaches the Sun.”
The lander is
being called Philea for Philea Island in the Nile where an obelisk was found
that supplemented the use of the Rosetta Stone in the deciphering of
hieroglyphics.
The cost of the mission
is 1.3 billion Euros ($1.75 billion at current exchange rates) and ESA asks the
question: “Why spend such a huge amount of public money on studying remote
stones in space?”
ESA responds: “ESA’s task is to explore the
unknown. In the case of Rosetta, scientists will be learning about comets,
objects that have fascinated mankind for millennia” and “are thought to be the
most primitive objects in the Solar System, the building blocks from which the planets
were made. So Rosetta will provide exciting new insights into how the planets,
including Earth, were born and how life began.”
There can be
things that can still go wrong on the mission. Gases from the comet could
affect Rosetta flying with it. Philae could fail to get hooked to the comet,
although a “harpoon” system has been devised for it to anchor itself to the comet’s
surface.
But if the
Rosetta mission is a success it will be a superb example of a space mission
that represents no nuclear threat to life on Earth and of a quest with the highest
of purposes—exploring the mysteries of the Solar System and the origins of life.
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