Europe's mission to land the first-ever probe on a comet was on track today with one final "go" pending for the robot lab to eject from its mothership and start a nail-biting seven-hour descent.
Ground controllers in Darmstadt, Germany, gave the Rosetta spacecraft and her precious cargo, lander Philae, the all-clear in the first three of four crucial systems checks before landing manoeuvres will be initiated.
The high-stakes mission should receive its conclusive "go/-no-go" signal about an hour before Philae is scheduled to depart at 0835 GMT on the final, solo leg of an epic, 6.5-billion kilometre (four-billion mile) space journey.
Also Read
"The Philae Control Team at the Lander Control Centre have completed a final check and verification of the lander's health. The GO was given at 0235 GMT," said an entry on the European Space Agency's Rosetta blog.
"Following a short manoeuvre set for 0730 (GMT), the final GO for separation will be made around 0735 (GMT)," it added.
The mission's landing phase passed its first systems check yesterday to confirm Rosetta was on the correct trajectory.
The second check at midnight GMT confirmed the telecommand instructions for Philae's separation from Rosetta, and its subsequent landing, had been correctly uploaded.
The third "go/no-go" signal, an hour later than initially scheduled, confirmed Philae was in good health and ready for its 20 km descent to the 900 x 600 metre (3,000 x 2,000 foot) landing site.
Philae is a 100-kilo (220-pound) lander carrying 10 scientific instruments for the first-ever on-site analysis of a comet, which astrophysicists hope will reveal secrets about the origins of the Solar System and maybe even life on Earth.
One of the most complex and ambitious unmanned programmes in space history, the 1.3-billion-euro (USD 1.6-billion) mission was approved in 1993.
Hoisted into space more than ten years later, Rosetta took another decade to reach its target, comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, in August this year.
From its orbit, Rosetta has made some astonishing observations including that the comet's profile somewhat resembles that of a rubber bath duck, with a treacherous, irregular surface -- a difficult target to land on.
The big test will be for Philae to settle down safely as Rosetta and 67P zip towards the Sun at a breakneck 18 kilometres per second (11 miles per second), at a distance of 510 million kilometres (320 million miles) from Earth.
"Everyone's nervous, everyone's on tenterhooks, but we know the risk is worth taking. The rewards are enormous," ESA senior science advisor Mark McCaughrean said yesterday of the historic attempt.