Mission complete: The fond farewells sent to Rosetta

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Tweet by @ESA_Rosetta saying mission completeImage source, Twitter/@ESA_Rosetta

Rosetta, the European Space Agency's probe, has crashed on to the surface of comet 67P, ending its two-year tracking mission.

Space fans around the world have marked Rosetta's demise with a mix of celebration and poignancy.

"Today is the big moment: #Rosetta lands on #67P and reunites with #Philae *so excited* :D," tweeted one German fan.

Image source, Twitter/@Fuchskind

Many were sad about the end of the probe, as it headed towards the 4km-wide, duck-shaped comet.

Image source, Twitter/@ErrantScience

About Rosetta

Scientists have used Rosetta to study 67P's characteristics, such as its chemical and mineralogical composition.

Image source, Tom Gauld

Data from the comet has also had implications for scientists studying the origin of the solar system. Perhaps these guys were one discovery?

Image source, Twitter/@NickAstronomer

Imagined reunion

Many also recalled Philae, the robot lander launched from Rosetta, which dropped onto the comet in 2014.

Philae was lost in February when its battery ran out, but ground control managed to find it again through images Rosetta sent back.

Image source, Twitter/@ESA_Rosetta

The images and other data suggested Philae landed at an awkward angle and so could only work off one single charge of its solar battery.

More than one person has imagined a happy reunion between Rosetta and Philae.

Image source, Twitter/ESA/@IamPhilaeLander

Rosetta was named after the Rosetta Stone, which was key to deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphs.

Philae is an island in the Nile where archaeologists found another inscription that confirmed their interpretation of the stone.

Image source, Twitter/@Aikawakira

Emotional end

Those who have been following the mission since it began in 2004 prepared accessories to help them face the end.

Image source, Twitter/@AndreasSchepers

And it's not just scientists - the media have also eagerly followed the mission.

Image source, Twitter/@ScienceNelson

And some fans just wanted to mark the moment...

Image source, Twitter/@_Merlyn

Dr Paul Coxon told the whole story of Rosetta with creative use of emojis:

Image source, Twitter/@paulcoxon

Other friends

The NASA Cassini spacecraft tweeted its respects to Rosetta:

Image source, Twitter/@CassiniSaturn

As did the Mars Curiosity Rover:

Image source, @Twitter/@MarsCuriosity

Rosetta out

And finally Rosetta's last tweet...

Image source, Twitter/@ESA_Rosetta

By Tse Yin Lee, UGC and Social News team