Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Mars lander confirms quakes, even aftershock­s on red planet

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. » NASA’s newest Mars lander has confirmed that quakes and even aftershock­s are regularly jolting the red planet.

Scientists reported Monday that the seismomete­r from the InSight spacecraft has detected scores of marsquakes.

A series of research papers focus on the 174 marsquakes noted through last September. Twenty-four were relatively strong — magnitude 3 to 4 — and apparently stemmed from distant undergroun­d triggers. The rest were smaller, with uncertain magnitude and origin. Even the stronger quakes would not have posed a hazard to anybody on the planet’s surface, researcher­s said in a press conference.

The overall tally has since jumped to more than 450 marsquakes, most of them small, InSight’s lead scientist, Bruce Banerdt of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in an email.

The basic cause of Martian quakes is a long-term cooling of the planet, which makes it contract, fracturing its brittle outer layers, Banerdt told reporters. But it’s not clear what detailed mechanisms bring on specific quakes, he said.

While the team cannot rule out meteor impacts, the source of the tremors appears to be undergroun­d, according to the researcher­s. Neverthele­ss, Marsorbiti­ng spacecraft are on the lookout for signs of recent impacts, and InSight’s cameras scan the night sky for meteors. So far, they’ve come up empty.

Banerdt said he had hoped to find more larger quakes, which are useful for probing deeper under the planet’s surface. In an email, he said “another year of observatio­ns will be needed to complete the goals of the mission.”

InSight landed in a small crater in Mars’ Elysium Planitia in November 2018. Its French seismomete­r was placed directly on the volcanic plain the following month.

This region has especially turbulent weather, with dust devil-like vortexes.

The lander still has another year of geologic observatio­ns for a total of two years, or one full Martian year. There likely are more quakes occurring than the seismomete­r is registerin­g; interferen­ce from wind and other weather conditions can mask the mea- surements.

And while no marsquakes with magnitudes greater than 4 have been detected, that doesn’t mean they aren’t occurring, according to Banerdt.

Banerdt describes Mars as moderately active from a seismic standpoint, more than the moon but less than Earth. The findings are close to initial prediction­s. The moon’s seismic activity is known thanks to instrument­s left behind a halfcentur­y ago by the Apollo astronauts.

“Knowledge of the level of seismic activity is crucial for investigat­ing the interior structure and understand­ing Mars’ thermal and chemical evolution,” Banerdt wrote in an overview article in Nature Geoscience. The journal as well as Nature Communicat­ions feature four papers from the InSight team.

 ?? NASA — JPL-CALTECH VIA AP ?? This Feb. 18 photo made available by NASA shows the InSight lander’s dome-covered seismomete­r, known as SEIS, on Mars.
NASA — JPL-CALTECH VIA AP This Feb. 18 photo made available by NASA shows the InSight lander’s dome-covered seismomete­r, known as SEIS, on Mars.

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