Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mars probes team up, detect huge meteor hits

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Two NASA spacecraft at Mars — one on the surface and the other in orbit — have recorded the biggest meteor strikes and impact craters yet.

The high-speed barrages last year sent seismic waves rippling thousands of miles across Mars, the first ever detected near the surface of another planet, and carved out craters nearly 500 feet across, scientists reported Thursday in the journal Science.

The larger of the two strikes churned out boulder-size slabs of ice, which may help researcher­s look for ways future astronauts can tap into Mars’ natural resources.

The Insight lander measured the seismic shocks, while the Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter provided stunning pictures of the resulting craters.

Imaging the craters “would have been huge already,” but matching it to the seismic ripples was a bonus, said co-author Liliya Posiolova of Malin Space Science Systems in San Diego. “We were so lucky.”

Mars’ atmosphere is thin unlike on Earth, where the thick atmosphere prevents most space rocks from reaching the ground, instead breaking and incinerati­ng them.

A separate study in September linked a recent series of smaller Martian meteoroid impacts with smaller craters closer to InSight, using data from the same lander and orbiter.

The impact observatio­ns come as InSight nears the end of its mission because of dwindling power, its solar panels blanketed by dust storms. InSight landed on the equatorial plains of Mars in 2018 and has since recorded more than 1,300 marsquakes.

“It’s going to be heartbreak­ing when we finally lose communicat­ion with InSight,” said Bruce Banerdt of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the lander’s chief scientist who took part in the studies. “But the data it has sent us will certainly keep us busy for years to come.”

Banerdt estimated the lander had between four to eight more weeks before power runs out.

The incoming space rocks were between 16 feet and 40 feet in diameter, said Posiolova. The impacts registered about magnitude 4.

The larger of the two struck in December about 2,200 miles from InSight, creating a crater roughly 70 feet deep. The orbiter’s cameras showed debris hurled up to 25 miles from the impact, as well as white patches of ice around the crater, the most frozen water observed at such low latitudes, Posiolova said.

Posiolova spotted the crater earlier this year after taking extra pictures of the region from orbit. The crater was missing from earlier photos, and after poring through the archives, she pinpointed the impact to late December. She remembered a large seismic event recorded by InSight around that time and with help from that team, matched the fresh hole to what was undoubtedl­y a meteoroid strike. The blast wave was clearly visible.

Scientists also learned the lander and orbiter teamed up for an earlier meteoroid strike, more than double the distance of the December one and slightly smaller.

The seismic readings from the two impacts indicate a denser Martian crust beyond InSight’s location.

“We still have a long way to go to understand­ing the interior structure and dynamics of Mars, which remain largely enigmatic,” said Doyeon Kim of ETH Zurich’s Institute of Geophysics in Switzerlan­d, who was part of the research.

Outside scientists said future landers from Europe and China will carry even more advanced seismomete­rs. Future missions will “paint a clearer picture” of how Mars evolved, Yingjie Yang and Xiaofei Chen from China’s Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen wrote in an accompanyi­ng editorial.

 ?? (AP/NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS) ?? A combinatio­n of images (top) made available by NASA on Thursday shows the site on Mars before and after a meteoroid hit the planet surface on Dec. 24 in a region of Mars called Amazonis Planitia. A dust-covered InSight Mars lander (lower) is shown on April 24, the 1,211th Martian day, or sol, of its mission. InSight is expected to go dark in four to eight weeks, its solar panels unable to keep working.
(AP/NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS) A combinatio­n of images (top) made available by NASA on Thursday shows the site on Mars before and after a meteoroid hit the planet surface on Dec. 24 in a region of Mars called Amazonis Planitia. A dust-covered InSight Mars lander (lower) is shown on April 24, the 1,211th Martian day, or sol, of its mission. InSight is expected to go dark in four to eight weeks, its solar panels unable to keep working.
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