Yes it's an incredible feat and simply awesome in and of itself. I often find myself wonder as much 50ft but then stop to say to myself, there needn't always be "benefit". The act/achievement alone sometimes begets benefits.
Quote from: Aloha007 on November 14, 2014, 05:25:03 PMYes it's an incredible feat and simply awesome in and of itself. I often find myself wonder as much 50ft but then stop to say to myself, there needn't always be "benefit". The act/achievement alone sometimes begets benefits. I take your point, but when I see something like this, I'm looking for 220 million Euro of benefit ..... and discovering that the comet smells of bad farts doesn't cut the mustard with me
It could have blown up on launch, but didn't. It could have failed in flight, but didn't. It could have missed it's target, but didn't. As far as space exploration goes, I call it a success. Could it have been more successful? Sure. But at this level of difficulty, any data returned is awesome.It is impossible to say what ESA has learned from this mission, and how that will improve future missions.In retrospect, though, I bet they wish they'd installed little extendable legs to right the lander if it tipped over.