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European Space Agency makes final preparations to land spacecraft on a comet

WATCH ABOVE: The European Space Agency will attempt to land a craft on a comet later this month. The craft will also take pictures of the attempt and beam them back to Earth. The landing is expected to take around seven hours.

BERLIN – Scientists at the European Space Agency are making final preparations to land the first spacecraft on a comet next week.

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The launch of a small lander from ESA’s Rosetta space probe marks one of the key moments in the decade-long mission to examine comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

ESA scientists said Friday that a series of orbital manoeuvrs and calculations for the touchdown will take place over the coming days before the lander, dubbed Philae, is released at 0835 GMT (3:35 a.m. EST) Wednesday.

If all goes according to plan, the 100-kilogram (220-pound) lander will latch onto the comet’s icy surface seven hours later.

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Spacecraft Operations Manager Andrea Accomazzo told reporters he doesn’t doubt Philae will land on the comet, but “whether we hit it safely is another matter.”

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