Post by Salem6 on Jul 4, 2005 9:18:56 GMT
US space agency (Nasa) scientists are celebrating after seeing a probe crash into the heart of a comet.
One of the first images to come through from the Deep Impact spacecraft
The washing machine-sized "impactor" collided with Comet Tempel 1 at a relative speed of 37,000km/h, throwing up a huge plume of icy debris.
The probe's mothership, the Deep Impact spacecraft, watched the event from a safe distance, sending images to Earth.
Dr Don Yeomans, a Nasa mission scientist, was ecstatic: "We hit it just exactly where we wanted to.
"The impact was bigger than I expected, and bigger than most of us expected. We've got all the data we could possibly ask for."
Comets - giant "dirty snowballs", as some have called them - are believed to contain materials that have remained largely unchanged since the formation of the Solar System 4.6 billion years ago.
Scientists hope that by getting "under the skin" of Comet Tempel 1, they can gain new information on the Solar System's original composition and perhaps even how life emerged in our corner of the Universe.
Waiting for the crash
Agency staff working on the $333m mission cheered, clapped and hugged when the first pictures of the impact came through to the control room at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California.
Dr Charles Elachi, director of JPL, added. "From the beginning, I said this was one of the most daring missions and now we have success," he said.
"We are in the business of opening new frontiers in the exploration of space. When we analyse the data, we will have a whole new insight into the Universe."
The collision occurred at just after 0550 GMT at a distance of about 133 million km from Earth.
Heading for impact: The comet's surface was seen by the probe to within seconds of the crash
The 372kg probe was released from the Deep Impact spacecraft on Sunday, and essentially waited to be runover by the comet as the mothership stood back at some 500km with its cameras rolling.
In the moments before impact, the probe itself relayed pictures of the looming 14km-wide mass of ice, dust and rock. Large circular craters could be seen on the comet's surface.
The impactor's last image was sent just three seconds before it hit the comet.
It will take a few days for all the data from Deep Impact's observations to download, and scientists will then spend several months interpreting it.
All vantage points
Researchers were uncertain as to the size of scar their impactor would leave on the comet. It could be anywhere from the size of a large house to a football stadium and between two and 14 stories deep.
Their studies will have the benefit of pictures taken by a range of different telescopes around Earth.
Some of the biggest and most expensive instruments were deployed, including the Hubble space observatory in its orbit above the planet, and the world's largest optical telescope facility, the VLT in Chile.
Delight at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
UK planetary scientist Dr Monica Grady, from London's Natural History Museum, watched a feed of the Deep Impact images sent down to Earth.
"It's absolutely fantastic to see this," she said. "Before we knew so little about the comet nucleus; we had little idea of what the surface looked like.
"We now have these high-resolution images and can compare this crater against natural ones. We're going to get so much out of this."
And Professor Iwan Williams, from Queen Mary, University of London, who is working on Europe's Rosetta mission to a comet, was also taken aback by the scale of the event.
"It was like mosquito hitting a 747. What we've found is that the mosquito didn't splat on the surface, it's actually gone through the windscreen."
news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4647673.stm