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ESA
Contracts with Ariane for Rosetta Launch
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The European
Space Agency (ESA) has contracted with Arianespace for a January
12, 2003 launch of the Rosetta comet-rendezvous mission. The
mission will carry the Rosetta Lander (Surface Science Package) to
the comet nucleus and deploy it onto the comet's surface.
The 2900 kg (6391
lbm) Rosetta spacecraft will be launched singly-manifested into an
Earth-escape orbit using an Ariane 5 heavy-lift rocket. The
mission includes flybys of asteroids (4979) Otawara and (140) Siwa
and measurements of the trailing dust of Comet 46P/Wirtanen. A 100
kg (220 lbm) lander will separate from the satellite and land, in
November 2011, on a comet named 46P/Wirtanen. The spacecraft will
fly by Earth and Mars in 2005, asteroid Otawara in 2006, Earth
again in 2007 and Siwa in 2008 prior to its rendezvous with comet
46P/Wirtanen in 2011 for a 2-year observation mission.
The Rosetta
Science Instruments will be made up of an Imager, IR and UV
spectrometers, plasma package, radio sounder to investigate
subsurface layering of materials, magnetometer, particle analysis
instruments. The lander package will include an imager,
magnetometer, and an alpha/proton/x-ray spectrometer to determine
the chemical composition of the surface materials. Ground
operations will acquire the down-link in S-band using the ESA
network and control the spacecraft to a fine pointing attitude
with the HGA Earth pointing using X-band telemetry.
The Rosetta
spacecraft design is based on a box-type central structure, 2.8 m
x 2.1 m x 2.0 m, on which all subsystems and payload equipments
are mounted. Two solar panels, each of 32 square meters, extend
outwards, giving a total span of about 32 m tip to tip. The Lander
is attached to the face opposite the two-axes steerable high-gain
antenna. The instrument panel will almost always point towards the
comet, while the antennas and solar arrays will be oriented
towards the Sun and Earth. The spacecraft is built around a
vertical thrust tube, whose diameter corresponds to the 1194 mm
Ariane-5 interface. This tube contains two large, equally sized,
propellant tanks, the upper one containing fuel, and the lower one
the oxidizer. At least 1578 kg (3478 lbm) propellant will be
accommodated.
The total program
budget, including satellite design, construction and launch, is
540 million euros, not including the individual experiments
provided by national space agencies. The launch contract is valued
at US$103 million (120 million euros). Rosetta is an ESA
Cornerstone science mission. The Rosetta Mission was approved in
November 1993.
Rosetta is being
built by Astrium GmbH of Friedrichshafen, Germany. The French and
Italian space agencies are collaborating on the construction of
the lander.

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