The European Space Agency (ESA) is Europe’s gateway to space. Its mission is to shape the development of Europe’s space capability and ensure that investment in space continues to deliver benefits to the citizens of Europe and the world.
Find out more about space activities in our 23 Member States, and understand how ESA works together with their national agencies, institutions and organisations.
Exploring our Solar System and unlocking the secrets of the Universe
Go to topicProtecting life and infrastructure on Earth and in orbit
Go to topicUsing space to benefit citizens and meet future challenges on Earth
Go to topicMaking space accessible and developing the technologies for the future
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Visitors to the Rosetta stand at the ESTEC Open Day on 6 October 2013 watched ‘cook a comet’ demonstrations to illustrate aspects of comet science that the Rosetta mission will explore at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko in 2014.
The comet analogue was made by mixing together dirt, dry ice (frozen carbon dioxide), water, and a slug of chocolate sauce to represent the organic chemistry of comets. Thick gloves are needed to handle the dry ice to protect against cold ‘burns’.
The final result was a dark, lumpy comet-like nucleus with active gas jets where the dry ice is exposed at the surface, replicating at a much smaller scale the type of activity that real comets experience as they warm up on their approach to the Sun.
Experts from the Rosetta mission were on hand to answer questions. From left to right: Gerhard Schwehm (former mission manager and project scientist for Rosetta, and project scientist for ESA’s Giotto mission to Comet Halley in 1986), Emily Baldwin (ESA’s space science editor) and Fred Jansen (Rosetta mission manager).