Toronto Star

NASA launches InSight to Mars

Spacecraft will dig deeper than ever into red planet

- MARCIA DUNN

A robotic geologist armed with a hammer and quake monitor rocketed toward Mars on Saturday, aiming to land on the red planet and explore its mysterious insides.

In a twist, NASA launched the Mars InSight lander from California rather than Florida’s Cape Canaveral. It was the first interplane­tary mission ever to depart from the West Coast, drawing pre-dawn crowds to Vandenberg air force base and rocket watchers down the California coast into Baja.

The spacecraft will take more than six months to get to Mars and start its unpreceden­ted geologic excavation­s, travelling 485 million kilometres to get there.

InSight will dig deeper into Mars than ever before — nearly five metres — to take the planet’s temperatur­e. It will also attempt to make the first measuremen­ts of marsquakes, using a high-tech seismomete­r placed directly on the Martian surface. Also aboard the Atlas-V rocket: a pair of mini satellites, or CubeSats, meant to trail InSight all the way to Mars in a first-of-its-kind technology demonstrat­ion. The $1-billion (U.S.) mission involves scientists from the U.S., France, Germany and elsewhere in Europe.

“I can’t describe to you in words how very excited I am … to go off to Mars,” said project manager Tom Hoffman from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. “It’s going to be awesome.”

NASA hasn’t put a spacecraft down on Mars since the Curi- osity rover in 2012. The U.S. is the only country to successful­ly land and operate a spacecraft on Mars. It’s tough, complicate­d stuff. Only about 40 per cent of all missions to Mars from all countries — orbiters and landers alike — have proven successful over the decades.

If all goes well, the threelegge­d InSight will descend by parachute and engine firings onto a flat equatorial region of Mars — believed to be free of big, potentiall­y dangerous rocks — on Nov. 26. Once down, it will stay put, using a mechanical arm to place the science instrument­s on the surface.

“This mission will probe the interior of another terrestria­l planet, giving us an idea of the size of the core, the mantle, the crust and our ability then to compare that with the Earth,” said NASA’s chief scientist Jim Green. “This is of fundamenta­l importance to understand the origin of our solar system.”

InSight’s chief scientist, Bruce Banerdt of JPL, said Mars is ideal for learning how the rocky planets of our solar system formed 4.5 billion years ago. It hasn’t been transforme­d by plate tectonics and other processes, he noted.

Over the course of two Earth years — or one Martian year — scientists expect InSight’s three main experiment­s to provide a true 3D image of Mars. The lander is equipped with a seismomete­r for measuring marsquakes, a self-hammering probe for burrowing beneath the surface and a radio system for tracking the spacecraft’s position and planet’s wobbly rotation, thereby revealing the size and compositio­n of Mars’ core.

“InSight, for seismologi­sts, will really be a piece of history, a new page of history,” said the Paris Institute of Earth Physics’ Philippe Lognonne, lead scientist of the InSight seismomete­r.

 ?? BILL INGALLS/NASA/GETTY IMAGES ?? The United Launch Alliance Atlas-V rocket set off for Mars on Saturday with the NASA InSight spacecraft onboard.
BILL INGALLS/NASA/GETTY IMAGES The United Launch Alliance Atlas-V rocket set off for Mars on Saturday with the NASA InSight spacecraft onboard.

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