The Borneo Post

NASA’s newest Mars lander to study quakes on Red Planet

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TAMPA: Nasa is poised to launch its first lander to Mars since 2012, an unmanned spacecraft called InSight that aims to listen for quakes and unravel the mystery of how rocky planets like Earth form.

It is scheduled to launch on Saturday at 705 am Eastern time (1105 GMT) from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, and if all goes as planned, it should land on the Red Planet Nov 26.

Since the Earth and Mars likely formed by similar processes 4.5 billion years ago, the US space agency hopes the lander – officially known as Interior Exploratio­n using Seismic Investigat­ions, Geodesy and Heat Transport ( InSight) – will shed light on what made them so different.

“How we get from a ball of featureles­s rock into a planet that may or may not support life is a key question in planetary science,” said Bruce Banerdt, InSight principal investigat­or at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

“We’d like to be able to understand what happened. On Earth, these processes have been obscured over billions of years by earthquake­s and the movement of molten rock in the mantle,” he said.

But Mars, the fourth planet from the Sun and Earth’s smaller and less geological­ly active neighbour, may yield more clues.

The lander will gather informatio­n using three instrument­s: a French-made seismomete­r, a device to help scientists on Earth keep precise track of the lander’s location as Mars rotates, and a self-hammering probe that will monitor the flow of heat in the planet’s subsurface.

Scientist expect to pick up as many as 100 quakes during the mission, which should last about two Earth years, or one Martian year. Most of the quakes are expected to be less than 6.0 on the Richter scale.

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