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| Saturday, February 6, 1999 Published at 22:26 GMT Sci/Tech Comet-chaser mission postponed ![]() Stardust approaches comet Wild-2 The launch of the Stardust spacecraft, which aims to collect debris from a comet, has been put back to Sunday. The launch of the NASA mission on Saturday was called off less than two minutes before blast off when an alarm sounded. It was triggered by a malfunction in a radar tracking beacon.
After launch, the spacecraft will follow a long trajectory around the inner solar system until it encounters comet Wild-2 in January 2004.
But that all changed after a close encounter with Jupiter - the planet's gravity changed the comet's orbit sending it much closer to the Sun. It is now a realistic prospect to try to reach Wild-2 with a spacecraft. Stardust's fly-through of the comet will mean it can collect material that came from the same cloud of gas and dust out of which our Sun and planets formed. Comet tails
The comet becomes enveloped in a cloud of dust and gas - some of which trails behind it, some of which is blown away by the pressure of sunlight. These are the comet's tails. In January 2004, Stardust will plough through this gas and dust shroud flying within 100 miles of the nucleus. Its delicate instruments and cameras will be protected behind an armoured shield. But a sample collection device will be deployed that will trap specks of dust.
After the flyby, the aerogel with its trawl of perhaps 1,000 specs of dust will be enclosed in a capsule and ejected into an orbit that will bring it back to Earth. The capsule should arrive on 15 January, 2006, parachuting down over the salt flats of Utah. It will then be taken to a sterile laboratory and opened.
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