Five International Stories You'll Care About Next Week

Obama to Asia, Tower of London poppies, Australian PM's Putin vow.

And next Wednesday – after 10 years and a journey of 4 billion miles – the Rosetta spacecraft will launch its Philae landing module onto a comet traveling through space at 40,000 mph. Rosetta has been orbiting the duck shaped comet, 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, since September as scientists here on Earth have been looking where to land. Scientists and engineers identified a spot called “Agikia.” And at 3.35 a.m. ET next Wednesday, the flight team based at the European Space Agency mission control in Germany will instruct Rosetta to drop Philae 14 miles above the surface of the comet. The descent, 300 million miles from earth, will take around seven hours. Because of the distance, communication between Rosetta and the controllers take 28 minutes each way. All being well, it should land around 11 a.m. ET. There’s no steering of the lander. Once released, Philae is on a path of its own. An inaccuracy of just a few fractions of an inch per second in Rosetta’s orbit, could mean the lander completely missing the comet. Think it’s simple? Our friends at the BBC have come up with cool interactive feature that allows you to have a go. It’s not so easy!