instrument studies diff erent clues so that scientists can
put together the whole picture.
The instrument I work with is Alice, an ultraviolet
spectrometer led by principal investigator Alan Stern
(Southwest Research Institute). Alice is the fi rst UV
spectrometer to visit a comet and is one of three instru-
ments contributed by NASA to support this European-led
mission. With Alice, we’ll observe the comet’s surface and
the coma’s gas to fi gure out the relative proportion of cer-
tain elements and molecules. For instance, one of Alice’s
science objectives is to determine how abundant the noble
gases (e.g. helium, neon, argon) and molecular nitrogen
are in the gas coming from the nucleus. Both the trap-
ping of noble gases into cometary ice and their release are
temperature dependent, so based on the relative amounts
that we measure of those species and the timing of when
we detect them, we can deduce how cold it was in the cor-
ner of the solar system where the comet formed and the
history of C-G’s previous passes around the Sun.
We’ll also be able to tell how the temperature changes
inside the nucleus over time. Diff erent types of ices
sublimate at diff erent temperatures, so changes in the
proportions of the compounds coming out can reveal the
internal temperature.
Rosetta is an impressive spacecraft. The core is a
roughly 2.5-meter (8-foot) cube containing propulsion,
avionics, communications, computers, and all the instru-
ments. Star Trek fans might liken it to a small Borg space-
ship. What really stand out are the huge solar panels.
With a tip-to-tip wingspan of 32 meters and a collecting
area of 64 square meters, it’s the largest solar-power array
for any interplanetary spacecraft, just beating out the
Alice Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer
Analyzes gases in the coma and tail, measures UV surface properties
Comet Nucleus Sounding Experiment by Radiowave Transmission (CONSERT)
Uses radio waves to probe the comet’s interior
Cometary Secondary Ion Mass Analyzer (COSIMA)
Chemical analysis of dust grains, including composition and whether
they are organic or inorganic
Grain Impact Analyzer and Dust Accumulator (GIADA)
Measures the number, mass, momentum, and velocity distribution of dust
grains coming from the nucleus and from other directions (refl ected by solar
radiation pressure)
Micro-Imaging Dust Analysis System (MIDAS)
Provides information on population, size, volume, and shape of dust grains
Microwave Instrument for the Rosetta Orbiter (MIRO)
Determines abundances of major gases, surface outgassing rate, and the
nucleus’s subsurface temperature
Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System (OSIRIS)
Wide-angle and narrow-angle cameras
Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis (ROSINA)
Chemical analysis of the comet’s atmosphere (composition, particle velocities,
and reactions)
Rosetta Plasma Consortium (RPC)
Five sensors; examine the nucleus’s physical properties and the inner coma’s
structure, monitor activity, study comet’s interaction with the solar wind
Radio Science Investigation (RSI)
Measures the nucleus’s mass and density, defi nes comet’s orbit, and studies
the inner coma
Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS)
Maps nature of the solids and temperatures on the nucleus’s surface, identi-
fi es comet gases, and characterizes the coma’s physical conditions
Rosetta’s OSIRIS Narrow-Angle Camera took this image of
Comet C-G (circled) on April 30th from more than 2 million
kilometers away. The 12-minute exposure reveals the growing
dusty coma. The globular cluster M107 shines at left.
ESA / ATG MEDIALAB
ESA / ROSETTA / MPS FOR OSIRIS-TEAM MPS / UPD / LAM / IAA / SSO / INTA / UPM / DASP / IDA
COSIMA
ROSINA DFMS
GIADA
ROSINA COPS
CONSERT
VIRTIS
OSIRIS NAC
Philae
OSIRIS WAC
MIDAS
MIRO
RPC IES
ROSINA RTOF
RPC ICA
RPC MIP
RPC LAP
Alice
RSI (uses antenna)
RPC MAG
RPC LAP
Instruments on Rosetta Orbiter