Hello Earth! Can you see me? Rosetta spots crashed Philae in comet ditch

The Japan Times 

PARIS – Europe's Rosetta spacecraft has finally spotted its tiny lander, Philae, thought to be lost forever, stuck in a ditch on the surface of a comet hurtling through space, ground controllers said Monday. I've found @Philae2014!!" the European Space Agency (ESA) tweeted on behalf of Rosetta, orbiting comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko at some 682 million km (424 million miles) from Earth. The agency released a photo of the washing machine-sized robot lab on the comet's rough surface, one of its three legs thrust dramatically into the air. This was the first sighting of Philae since its rough landing in November 2014. The image was captured by Rosetta's OSIRIS narrow-angle camera on Friday and downloaded two days later -- just weeks before the official end of the groundbreaking science mission to unravel the mysteries of life on Earth. "With only a month left of the Rosetta mission, we are so happy to have finally imaged Philae and to see it in such amazing detail," Cecilia Tubiana of the OSIRIS camera team, the first person to see the images, said in a statement. The Twitter page of Philae, its communications unit switched off in July, remained silent. The 100-kg (220-pound) probe touched down on comet 67P in November 2014, after a 10-year, 6.5-billion-km (4-billion-mile) journey piggybacking on Rosetta. Philae bounced several times after its harpoons failed to fire, and ended up in a ditch shadowed from the sun's battery-replenishing rays. The tiny lab managed to conduct 60 hours of experiments and send home data before running out of power and entering standby mode on Nov. 15, 2014. "We were beginning to think that Philae would remain lost forever.

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