00:00On this day in space. On November 12, 2014, a European spacecraft named Philae tried to land on Comet 67P.
00:09To say it was a bumpy landing would be an understatement. Philae separated from an orbiter called Rosetta.
00:15It was supposed to use harpoons to secure itself on the comet's surface, but the harpoons never fired.
00:21When it touched down, it immediately bounced back up into space.
00:25The first bounce brought Philae half a mile above the comet's surface before gravity brought it back down.
00:31Philae drifted and bounced around the comet for two hours before Rosetta's cameras lost track of it.
00:36Scientists figured it was stuck in a shady spot where sunlight couldn't reach its solar panels.
00:41The batteries did last for more than two days on the surface, so Philae still got some science done.
00:46Most notably, it found organic molecules that had never been detected on a comet before.
00:51Philae was missing for almost two years before scientists found it.
00:54Images from Rosetta showed it stuck in a dark crevice on top of the rubber duck-shaped comet.
00:59And that's what happened on this day in space.
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