Say goodbye to Philae

Karin Ranero CeliusKarin Ranero Celius
  28 July 2016

12 November 2014 – a remarkable day for humankind.  For the first time ever, we landed a robot on the surface of a comet. The robot lander Philae touched down on the surface of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko at 17:09 CET, having travelled 6.4 billion kilometres in 10 years as a passenger aboard ESA’s Rosetta comet chaser. Yesterday, on 27 July 2016, the Electrical Support System (ESS) on the European Rosetta spacecraft, which is used to communicate with Philae, was switched off to save energy until 30 September, the day the Rosetta mission will come to an end.

 

philae tweet

Philae’s tweet upon landing on comet 67P reached millions of people.

The robot lander Philae didn’t just land on a comet, he also told the world about it as he did it – another first! With a little help from EJR-Quartz for DLR, he reported the landing, step by step, in real time as @Philae2014, making the world a part of his mission. His landing tweet “Touchdown! My new address: 67P” reached millions of people.

This little robot made his way into the hearts of many – but the time has come to say #GoodbyePhilae.

We are supporting the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in a campaign that invites the world to say farewell to the lander. Participating is very easy! You can find out how to say goodbye to the first ever robot to land on a comet here.

Follow along on social media:

Twitter: @Philae2014 – @DLR_en – @DLR_de

DLR Facebook (German)

DLR Facebook (English)

DLR Instagram

DLR Flickr