'Rock-n-roll Rosetta': $1.4 billion spacecraft crashes into comet

Europe’s comet chasing Rosetta spacecraft dramatically concluded its 12-year odyssey, crash-landing into the comet it orbited and probed for two years in a quest to demystify the Solar System's origins.

There were tears, hugs and cheers at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany when spacecraft operations manager Sylvain Lodiot announced: "This is the end of the Rosetta mission."

An artist depiction of the Rosetta. Photo: Yahoo News
An artist depiction of the Rosetta. Photo: Yahoo News

"Rock-n-roll Rosetta," added a visibly moved project scientist Matt Taylor as he left the podium.

Rosetta made a "controlled impact" with Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko at 10.41 GMT, the closing chapter in a trailblazing project approved in 1993 to look some 4.6 billion years back in time.

Comets are thought to contain primordial material from our planetary system's birth, preserved in a dark space deep freeze.

Rosetta had been programmed to touch down at a human walking pace of about 90cm (35 inches) per second, after a 14 hour freefall from an altitude of 19 kilometres (12 miles).

It joined long-spent robot probe Philae on the galactic wanderer's rocky, cold surface for an eternal journey around the Sun.

Confirmation of the mission's end came at 11.19 GMT, when the spacecraft's signal disappeared from ground controllers' computer screens.
"We have loss of signal of Rosetta," announced a grim-faced Lodiot.

"We will be listening for a signal for another 24 hours, but don't expect any..."

Mission scientists had expected Rosetta would bounce and tumble about before settling -- but the craft's final moments will forever remain a mystery as it was instructed to switch off on first impact.

The comet chaser was never designed to land.

In its final hours, Rosetta sent home crucial last-gasp data gathered from nearer the comet than ever before, tasting the comet's gas, dust and plasma, and taking close-up pictures of the spot that is now its icy tomb.

"It's a bittersweet thing," Taylor told AFP.

While scientists are looking forward to delving into Rosetta's last-minute data, "there is something about the attachment, there's something about that spacecraft being there. I will feel a sense of loss, surely."

A social media campaign and cartoon depicting the pair as intrepid space explorers, each with its "own" Twitter account, earned the mission a global following.

On Friday, the cartoon was updated with a dusty and bashed-up Rosetta lying eyes closed on the comet surface, as Earth held a placard proclaiming "Goodbye Rosetta".

"#Rosetta, is that you?" ESA tweeted on Philae's behalf.

"Scientists are like children: they dream without limits. There is nothing better than making dreams of children become a reality," flight operations director Andrea Accomazzo told AFP.

"This is the feeling we have. For me today is mission accomplished."

Insights gleaned from the 1.4-billion-euro project have shown that comets crashing into an early Earth may well have brought amino acids, the building blocks of life.

Comets of 67P's type, however, certainly did not bring water, scientists have concluded.

"Rosetta has blown it all open. It's made us have to change our ideas of what comets are, where they came from and ... how the solar system formed and how we got to where we are today," said Taylor.

"We have only just scratched the surface. We have decades of work to do. The spacecraft may end but the science will continue."

For flight operators, the separation was more difficult.

"They (scientists) still have the data to analyse but we don't have the spacecraft anymore," lamented Lodiot, who had been involved in the project for 12 years.

"Of course there is a bit of sadness," added Accomazzo, whose involvement spans nearly 20 years.

"You are going to miss it. But OK, life goes on," he shrugged.