Tue, Mar 02, 2004
Falling Foam Causes Concern
A chunk of foam that
fell off a rocket forced the European Space Agency to delay the
launch of a comet lander Friday for the second straight day. The
Rosetta probe -- meant to be the first spacecraft to land on a
comet -- had been scheduled to blast off from Kourou, French
Guiana, on an Ariane-5 rocket 24 hours after high winds in the
upper atmosphere delayed a first attempt.
But scientists called off the start of the 10-year journey after
discovering the 4-by-6-inch piece of insulation during a routine
inspection of the launch pad. Fearing that ice could form over
the hole left in the insulation and strike part of the rocket if it
broke off after launch, scientists decided to repair the damage and
aim instead for a launch on Tuesday or Wednesday. A large chunk of
foam insulation brought down the space shuttle Columbia last year,
killing seven astronauts. The foam snapped off the external fuel
tank during liftoff and knocked a hole in the wing. Mission
officials said Rosetta's insulation likely cracked off the main
rocket due to freezing and warming as the super-cold liquid
hydrogen and oxygen was added for launch, then removed after the
first postponement.
"Of course we are all disappointed not to see the launch today,
but that is life in this business," Gaele Winters, the European
Space Agency's director of operational and technical support, said
at mission control in Darmstadt, south of Frankfurt. "The
spacecraft Rosetta is in good shape and was not affected by these
events," he added. The agency says it has a window until March
17 to launch Rosetta toward an ice-caked comet called
67P/Churymov-Gerasimenko.
The space agency originally hoped to begin its mission in
January 2003, but its plans were delayed after another rocket in
the Ariane-5 family veered off course the previous month and had to
be destroyed. The rocket now launching the three-ton Rosetta is a
more time-tested version of the one that malfunctioned, and
scientists described Friday's problem as minor. In May 2014,
Rosetta is scheduled to rendezvous with 67P/Churymov-Gerasimenko
and go into orbit. Six months later, the probe will send a
box-shaped probe onto the surface as the comet speeds through the
solar system at 83,600 mph. Comets formed at the same time as the
solar system -- 4.6 billion years ago -- and are believed to hold
deep-frozen matter left over from the birth of the sun and
planets.
Since comets pelted Earth in the time after the solar system
formed, scientists theorize they may have brought some of the
building blocks for life, like water and organic materials onto our
planet. If the $1.25 billion European mission succeeds, it will be
the first time scientists have a chance for an up-close exploration
of a comet. Previously, spacecraft have only made brief fly-bys of
comets to take pictures. The mission is named for the Rosetta Stone
tablet that helped historians decipher Egyptian hieroglyphics.
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