Donald Savage
Headquarters, Washington                     February 19, 2004
(Phone: 202/358-1727)

DC Agle
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
(Phone: 818/393-9011)

RELEASE: 04-063

SPACECRAFT TO LAUNCH, DESIGNED TO HARPOON COSMIC MOBY DICK

     Like the massive white whale in Herman Melville's 1851 
classic "Moby Dick," comets have long been considered swift, 
elusive harbingers of change. So it should be of little 
surprise that one of the best ways for scientists to study the 
mysteries of comets is to harpoon one.

The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft is scheduled to 
lift off on Feb. 26, 2004, at 2:16 am EST, from the Kourou 
spaceport in French Guiana, on the northeastern coast of South 
America. The launch will be the beginning of a ten-and-a-half 
year odyssey to comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko that includes 
flybys of Mars (2007) and the Earth (2005, 2007 and 2009).

Among the instruments aboard the Rosetta spacecraft are three 
instruments funded by NASA and a key component of a fourth. The 
NASA instruments will examine Churyumov-Gerasimenko from the 
orbiter.

"This comet has only about three-hundred-thousandths the 
gravity of Earth," said Dr. Claudia Alexander, project 
scientist for the U.S. role in the mission, from NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, Calif. "The Rosetta 
spacecraft will be able to make observations from as close as 2 
kilometers (1.2 miles). The data from our state-of-the-art 
instruments will be amazing," she added.

Rosetta will reach Churyumov-Gerasimenko, a four-kilometer 
(2.5-mile) diameter comet, in May 2014. When this rendezvous 
occurs, Churyumov-Gerasimenko will be about three times as far 
from the sun as the Earth is. Over the next 18 months Rosetta 
will study how the comet changes as it moves closer to the sun. 
In November 2014, Rosetta will drop its experiment-laden, 
harpoon-firing lander on Churyumov-Gerasimenko's icy nucleus.

"What you have to understand is that comets are primordial 
remnants of the early solar system," explained Dr. Paul 
Weissman of JPL. "They are the keys to understanding the way 
the whole solar system, the Earth, and how even we came into 
being. And with Rosetta we will be able to observe, study and 
analyze this primordial material up close for more than a 
year," he said.

JPL supplied the Microwave Instrument for Rosetta Orbiter, the 
first of its type on any interplanetary mission. This 
instrument can reveal the abundances of selected gases, their 
temperatures, the speed at which they are coming off the 
nucleus, and the temperature of the nucleus. Scientists will 
use it to monitor changes in how vapors are released from the 
nucleus as the coma and tail grow. They will be studying water, 
carbon monoxide, ammonia and methanol, four of the most 
abundant gases from comets. Dr. Samuel Gulkis of JPL's Earth 
and Space Sciences Division is principal investigator.

The Southwest Research Institute, based in San Antonio, 
supplied two NASA instruments for Rosetta. One is an imaging 
telescope/spectrometer capable of analyzing the composition 
both of gases released by the comet and of the comet's surface. 
A goal of scientists using the instrument is to learn about the 
temperatures at which comets form and evolve, by determining 
the relative abundance of noble gases, such as helium, neon and 
argon. Principal investigator for the ultraviolet instrument is 
Dr. Alan Stern of the institute's Space Studies Department in 
Bolder, Colo.

Dr. James Burch, of the Institute's Instrumentation and Space 
Research Division, San Antonio, is principal investigator for 
Rosetta's Ion and Electron Spectrometer. This device will 
measure the environment of charged particles surrounding comet 
Churyumov-Gerasimenko. It will also study the interaction 
between that environment and the solar wind of charged 
particles speeding outward from the sun.

Key electronics for a fourth instrument, the Rosetta Orbiter 
Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis, have been supplied 
by Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center, Palo Alto, 
Calif. This instrument will examine gases surrounding the 
comet.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in 
Pasadena, manages the microwave instrument for NASA's Office of 
Space Science, Washington, D.C.

For information about the Rosetta mission visit:

http://www.esa.int/export/esaMI/Rosetta/index.html


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