Rosetta's last image before suicide mission

Rosetta transmits its last image of Comet 67P before crash-landing on it - bringing to an end an ambitious £1.2bn space venture.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

What have we learned from Rosetta?
Why you can trust Sky News

The Rosetta spacecraft ended its historic £1.2bn mission by smashing into the comet it has been chasing for 12 years.

Scientists at the European Space Agency cheered and hugged one another at the point of impact with the duck-shaped Comet 67P at 12.19pm.

"Thank you Rosetta," ESA director general Jan Woerner said on Twitter.

Rosetta's British project scientist, Dr Matt Taylor, described it as a "bittersweet" moment.

Rosetta mission's last image
Image: Rosetta mission's last image

Speaking from the ESA's control centre in Darmstadt, Germany, he said: "There is something about the attachment, there's something about that spacecraft being there. I will feel a sense of loss, surely."

Minutes later, the ESA tweeted the last image Rosetta took of the comet's surface before its crash-landing.

The spacecraft has observed the comet across more than 6 billion km (3.7 billion miles) of space, collecting a treasure trove of information which will keep scientists busy for decades.

More from Science & Tech

Engineers and scientists react to Rosetta's crash landing
Image: Engineers and scientists react to Rosetta's crash landing

The practical mission may have ended, said Dr Taylor, but the wealth of information provided by Rosetta means "the science will continue".

He said: "Rosetta's blown it all open, it's made us have to change our ideas of what comets are, where they came from, and the implications of how the solar system formed and how we got to where we are today.

"We have only just scratched the surface. We have decades of work to do on this data.

"The spacecraft may end, but the science will continue."

  1. Image taken when Rosetta was 17.4 km from the centre of the nucleus of Comet 67P
    Image: The images of Comet 67P were taken by Rosetta and released before the spacecraft crashes into the comet at the end of its mission
  2.  Image captured by Rosetta's OSIRIS narrow-angle camera of Comet 67P
    Image: The images were captured by Rosetta's OSIRIS narrow-angle camera
  3. An image captured by Rosetta's camera of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
    Image: The spacecraft will crash into the comet on Friday after a historic 12-year journey
  4. The comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
    Image: During the mission, Rosetta has collected information on comets that will keep scientists busy for the next decade
  5. The comet 67P/ChuryumovGerasimenko. The Rosetta orbiter is expected to crash land in an area in the lower left of the image. Pic: ESA
    Image: The Rosetta orbiter is expected to crash land in an area of the comet shown on the lower left of the image
  6. The note on the ESOC main control room door before the Rosetta spacecraft crash lands on to a comet
    Image: The note was left on the European Space Operations Centre main control room door
  7. Artist's impression of the Rosetta spacecraft approaching comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
    Image: Artist's impression of the Rosetta spacecraft approaching comet 67P

Rosetta completed its free-fall descent at the speed of a sedate walk, joining the probe Philae, which landed on the comet in November 2014. 

Europe's most ambitious space mission marks the first time a spacecraft has orbited and landed on a comet.

Rosetta has detected complex forms of carbon not found on Earth, a building block of proteins called glycine, and for the first time phosphorus which is a key component of DNA.

Scientists say the chemical make-up supports the theory that comets smashing into the Earth billions of years ago brought the ingredients for life.

Rosetta at comet
Image: Rosetta on its collision course with Comet 67P

But contrary to expectations, the chemical signature of water on the comet differs to that of our oceans, suggesting comets like 67P did not fill our seas.

Flight operations director Andrea Accomazzo, working on Rosetta for nearly 20 years, confessed "of course there is a bit of sadness" after a "long, long" professional investment.

"Scientists are like children: they dream without limits. There is nothing better than making dreams of children become a reality," he said.

"This is the feeling we have. For me today is mission accomplished."

The mission in numbers: 
:: 12 years, six months, 28 days: mission duration, from launch to end
:: 7.9 billion km (4.9 billion miles): distance travelled since 2004
:: 786 days: time Rosetta spent circling the comet 
:: 720 million km (450 million miles): current distance of Comet 67P from Earth
:: 14 hours: the duration of Rosetta's freefall
:: €1.4bn (£1.2bn): the cost of the mission 
:: 500: scientists and engineers involved in the project