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***When the Rosetta mission ended a new comic about it was released using the name of the probe as the title: [[1740: Rosetta]]. This continues a trend of naming comics after space probes. Until recently only the mars rover had this honour but in the same year as this cosmic was released also the space probe Juno was used like this, see below.
 
***When the Rosetta mission ended a new comic about it was released using the name of the probe as the title: [[1740: Rosetta]]. This continues a trend of naming comics after space probes. Until recently only the mars rover had this honour but in the same year as this cosmic was released also the space probe Juno was used like this, see below.
 
**In [[1476: Ceres]] the photos taken by the {{w|Dawn (spacecraft)|Dawn}} space probe of {{w|Ceres (dwarf planet)|Ceres}}, the largest known {{w|asteroid}} and the smallest known {{w|dwarf planet}}, is used in this comic, a few months before the probe went into orbit around Ceres. (This was also one of the space probes shown in Payloads).
 
**In [[1476: Ceres]] the photos taken by the {{w|Dawn (spacecraft)|Dawn}} space probe of {{w|Ceres (dwarf planet)|Ceres}}, the largest known {{w|asteroid}} and the smallest known {{w|dwarf planet}}, is used in this comic, a few months before the probe went into orbit around Ceres. (This was also one of the space probes shown in Payloads).
***This probe is also featured in ''[[Thing Explainer]]'' in ''Worlds around the Sun'' where it is called ''Special Engine Boat''.
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***This probe is also featured in ''[[Thing Explainer]]'' in ''Worlds around the Sun''.
 
**[[1532: New Horizons]] is named after {{w|New Horizons}},  the {{w|NASA}} space probe sent to study the dwarf planet {{w|Pluto}} and its moons. In this comic, from 1½ month before the probe reached Pluto, it turns out an error has sent the probe back to Earth instead. (The Dawn mission is mentioned here as well).
 
**[[1532: New Horizons]] is named after {{w|New Horizons}},  the {{w|NASA}} space probe sent to study the dwarf planet {{w|Pluto}} and its moons. In this comic, from 1½ month before the probe reached Pluto, it turns out an error has sent the probe back to Earth instead. (The Dawn mission is mentioned here as well).
 
***[[1551: Pluto]] was released on the day of New Horizons closest approach to Pluto on 2015-07-14 as a tribute to the achievement.
 
***[[1551: Pluto]] was released on the day of New Horizons closest approach to Pluto on 2015-07-14 as a tribute to the achievement.

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