Cape Argus

Probe to feel the pulse of Mars

Nasa is sending a robotic geologist to the planet to stare into its vital signs and gain fresh InSight

- Marcia Dunn

SIX YEARS after last landing on Mars, Nasa is sending a robotic geologist to dig deeper than ever before to take the planet’s temperatur­e. The Mars InSight spacecraft, set to launch this weekend, will also take the planet’s pulse by making the first measuremen­ts of “marsquakes”. And to check its reflexes, scientists will track the wobbly rotation of Mars on its axis to better understand the size and make-up of its core.

The lander’s instrument­s will allow scientists “to stare down deep into the planet,” said the mission’s chief scientist, Bruce Banerdt of Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Mars is smaller and geological­ly less active than its neighbour Earth, where plate tectonics and other processes have obscured our planet’s original make-up.

As a result, Mars has retained the “fingerprin­ts” of early evolution, said Banerdt.

In another first for the mission, a pair of briefcase-size satellites will launch aboard InSight, break free after lift-off, then follow the spacecraft for six months all the way to Mars. They won’t stop at Mars, just fly past. The point is to test the two CubeSats as a potential communicat­ion link with InSight as it descends to the red planet on November 26.

These Mars-bound cubes are nicknamed WALL-E and EVE after the animated movie characters.

That’s because they’re equipped with the same type of propulsion used in fire extinguish­ers to expel foam.

In the 2008 movie, WALL-E used a fire extinguish­er to propel through space.

InSight is scheduled to rocket away from central California’s Vandenberg Air Force Base early tomorrow.

It will be Nasa’s first interplane­tary mission launched from somewhere other than Florida’s Cape Canaveral. California­ns along the coast down to Baja will have front-row seats for the pre-dawn flight.

No matter the launching point, getting to Mars is hard.

The success rate, counting orbiters and landers by Nasa and others, is only about 40%.

The US is the only country to have successful­ly landed and operated spacecraft on Mars.

The 1976 Vikings were the first landing successes.

The most recent was the 2012 Curiosity rover.

InSight will use the same type of straightfo­rward parachute deployment and engine firings during descent as Phoenix lander did in 2008. No bouncy air bags like the Spirit and Opportunit­y rovers in 2004. No sky crane drop like Curiosity.

Landing on Mars with a spacecraft that’s not much bigger than a couple of office desks is “a hugely difficult task, and every time we do it, we’re on pins and needles,” Banerdt said.

It will take seven minutes for the spacecraft’s entry, descent and landing.

“Hopefully, we won’t get any surprises on our landing day. But you never know,” said Nasa project manager Tom Hoffman.

Once on the surface, InSight will take interplane­tary excavation to a “whole new level”, according to Nasa’s science mission director Thomas Zurbuchen.

A slender cylindrica­l probe dubbed the mole is designed to tunnel nearly 5m into the Martian soil.

A quake-measuring seismomete­r, meanwhile, will be removed from the lander by a mechanical arm and placed directly on the surface for better vibration monitoring.

InSight is actually two years late flying because of problems with the French-supplied seismomete­r system that had to be fixed.

The 694kg InSight builds on the design of the Phoenix lander and, before that, the Viking landers.

They’re all stationary three-legged landers; no roaming around.

InSight stands for “Interior Exploratio­n using Seismic Investigat­ions, Geodesy and Heat Transport.”

InSight’s science objectives, however, are reminiscen­t of Nasa’s Apollo programme.

Back in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Apollo moon-walkers drilled up to 2.5m into the lunar surface so scientists back home could measure the undergroun­d flow of lunar heat.

The moon still holds seismomete­rs left behind by the 12 moon-men.

Previous Mars missions have focused on surface or close-to-the-surface rocks and minerals.

Phoenix, for instance, dug just several inches down for samples.

The Martian atmosphere and magnetic field also have been examined in detail over the decades.

“But we have never probed sort of beneath the outermost skin of the planet,” said Banerdt.

The landing site, Elysium Planitia, is a flat equatorial region with few big rocks that could damage the spacecraft on touchdown or block the mechanical mole’s drilling.

Scientists are shooting for two years of work – that’s two years by Earth standards, or the equivalent of one full Martian year.

“Mars is still a pretty mysterious planet,” Banerdt said.

“Even with all the studying that we’ve done, it could throw us a curve-ball.”

 ?? PICTURE: AP/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? DIGGING DIRT: An artist’s impression of the InSight lander on Mars. InSight is designed to give the Red Planet its first thorough check-up since it formed 4.5 billion years ago.
PICTURE: AP/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) DIGGING DIRT: An artist’s impression of the InSight lander on Mars. InSight is designed to give the Red Planet its first thorough check-up since it formed 4.5 billion years ago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa