That was incredible.
That's interesting. The org itself seems reputable and serious. Their Sentinel satellite strikes me as important. Such a whimsical origin to the name, though.Dou you mean this?
European robot probe Philae has made the first, historic landing on a comet, after descending from its mothership.
The landing on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko was confirmed at about 1605 GMT.
There were cheers and hugs at the control room in Darmstadt, Germany, after the signal was confirmed.
It was designed to shine a light on some of the mysteries of these icy relics from the formation of the Solar System.
The landing caps a 6.4 billion-kilometre journey that was begun a decade ago.
The lander sank about 4cm into the surface, suggesting a relatively soft surface.
But there remains some lack of clarity over whether the harpoons designed to fasten the spacecraft to the ball of ice and dust fired as intended.
...
Scientists initially said Philae's harpoons did not fire as intended, but BBC science correspondent Jonathan Amos said this remained unclear.
If they did not deploy, then scientists will take a decision on whether to re-fire them.
However, sources said that screws in the feet that are also designed to anchor the robot into the soil did work.
Earlier, a thruster system designed to push the robot down into the surface of the comet failed.
Ha! I can't have sound on right now and I clicked on that rosetta.esa.int link and at first was amused at the ESA having to fund themselves with commercials.