Philae is indeed going to sleep. No hop, no sun shining on the solar panels.
Philae Lander @Philae2014 ·1 hour ago
.@ESA_Rosetta I’m feeling a bit tired, did you get all my data? I might take a nap… #CometLandingThank you, @ESA_Rosetta! I did it! I became the first spacecraft to land on a comet & study it! But it’s not over yet… #CometLanding
My #lifeonacomet has just begun @ESA_Rosetta. I’ll tell you more about my new home, comet #67P soon… zzzzz #CometLanding
Now cut that out. Philae isn’t Bambi’s mother.
Have a nice nap Philae.
But before those three, there was this:
My controlroom after a more than 100% successful #CometLanding (watch the party in the background)
It’s exciting to be human today.
chigau (違う) says
*sniffle*
Bernard Bumner says
Collaboration is the real triumph of humanity. This achievement is truly magnificent.
Closer to home: type 3 poliovirus may have been eradicated in the wild.
Ophelia Benson says
Collaboration combined with the ability to take on projects that span years or even decades with no certainty of success. There’s just nothing quite like watching a roomful of engineers waiting to see if their 5 or 10 years of work on something that is now millions of miles away is going to function or fizzle…and then erupt when it functions.
lpetrich says
But at least Philae accomplished its primary mission and radioed back the data that it found. It may take a while for the Philae team members to analyze all that data, however.
moarscienceplz says
I find it interesting how many people have been enthralled by this mission. After all, it’s just a small box landing on an ice block that no human will probably ever touch. And here in the USA,where we usually have a bad case of N.I.H. (if it was Not Invented Here, it’ not worth much), I think it’s even more surprising.
Maybe ordinary people are indeed marveling at the technical difficulties overcome and the chance to learn new things. I sure hope so.
Ophelia Benson says
It’s just a small box loaded with scientific instrumentation that can send data back to scientists on earth landing on an ice block (looks more like a bumpy rock, to me) that is millions of km away.
Nothing “just” about it. 🙂
Hj Hornbeck says
I… I think there’s something in my eye.
Emily Lakdawalla has a long and excellent farewell:
Lady Mondegreen (aka Stacy) says
It is. Sorry for going off topic and into politics, but…nothing refutes Objectivism like science.