Deccan Chronicle

Nasa to send 1st mission to study ‘heart’ of Mars

InSight will bring back info about the earliest stages of Mars’ formation

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Washington, March 30: Nasa is all set to send the first-ever mission dedicated to exploring the deep interior of Mars, the US space agency said on Friday.

Scheduled to launch on May 5, InSight — a stationary lander — will also be the first Nasa mission since the Apollo moon landings to place a seismomete­r, a device that measures quakes, on the soil of another planet.

“In some ways, InSight is like a scientific time machine that will bring back informatio­n about the earliest stages of Mars’ formation 4.5 billion years ago,” said Bruce Banerdt, principal investigat­or for InSight.

“It will help us learn how rocky bodies form, including Earth, its moon, and even planets in other solar systems,” said Banerdt.

InSight or the Interior Exploratio­n using Seismic Investigat­ions, Geodesy and Heat Transport mission, carries a suite of sensitive instrument­s to gather data.

Unlike a rover mission, these instrument­s require a stationary lander from which they can carefully be placed on and below the martian surface, Nasa said.

Mars is the exoplanet next door — a nearby example of how gas, dust and heat combine and arrange themselves into a planet.

Looking deep into Mars will let scientists understand how different its crust, mantle and core are from Earth, the US space agency said.

Nasa is not the only agency excited about the mission. Several European partners contribute­d instrument­s or instrument components to the InSight mission.

France’s Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales led a multinatio­nal team that built an ultra-sensitive seismomete­r for detecting marsquakes.

The German Aerospace Center developed a thermal probe that can bury itself up to five metres undergroun­d and measure heat flowing from inside the planet. — PTI

INSIGHT WILL help us learn how rocky bodies form, including Earth, its moon, and even planets in other solar systems.

IT WILL also be the first Nasa mission since the Apollo moon landings to place a seismomete­r.

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