Chattanooga Times Free Press

NASA spacecraft days away from risky Mars landing

- BY MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Mars is about to get its first U.S. visitor in years: a threelegge­d, one-armed geologist to dig deep and listen for quakes.

NASA’s InSight makes its grand entrance through the rose-tinted Martian skies on Monday, after a six-month, 300 million-mile journey. It will be the first American spacecraft to land since the Curiosity rover in 2012 and the first dedicated to exploring undergroun­d.

NASA is going with a triedand-true method to get this mechanical miner to the surface of the red planet. Engine firings will slow its final descent and the spacecraft will plop down on its rigid legs, mimicking the landings of earlier successful missions.

That’s where old school ends on this $1 billion U.S.-European effort.

Once flight controller­s in California determine the coast is clear at the landing site — fairly flat and rock free — InSight’s 6-foot (1.8meter) arm will remove the two main science experiment­s from the lander’s deck and place them directly on the Martian surface.

No spacecraft has attempted anything like that before. The firsts don’t stop there. One experiment will attempt to penetrate 16 feet into Mars, using a self-hammering nail with heat sensors to gauge the planet’s internal temperatur­e. That would shatter the out-of-this-world depth record of 8 feet drilled by the Apollo moonwalker­s nearly a half-century ago for lunar heat measuremen­ts.

The astronauts also left behind instrument­s to measure moonquakes. InSight carries the first seismomete­rs to monitor for marsquakes — if they exist.

 ?? NASA VIA AP ?? An illustrati­on by NASA shows the InSight lander drilling into the surface of Mars. InSight, short for Interior Exploratio­n using Seismic Investigat­ions, Geodesy and Heat Transport, is scheduled to arrive at the planet on Monday.
NASA VIA AP An illustrati­on by NASA shows the InSight lander drilling into the surface of Mars. InSight, short for Interior Exploratio­n using Seismic Investigat­ions, Geodesy and Heat Transport, is scheduled to arrive at the planet on Monday.

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