New Zealand tech company Rakon is heralding its link to a comet-catching space probe, which is poised to be the first to land a craft on the surface of a speeding frozen rock.
Auckland-headquartered Rakon published a bulletin on its website this morning saying the Rosetta used several frequency control components from the Kiwi company.
Rakon is proud to have crystal oscillators and filters in space on board Rosetta, the comet-chaser spacecraft!: http://t.co/zL9q8LSVnu
Rakon said its crystal oscillators and filters would be used during Rosetta's probe of the 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet, which aims to help learn more about the evolution of the solar system.
The Rosetta was launched in 2004 and is the first mission to try land on a comet, where it will carry tests on the frozen-rock's surface.