Scottish Daily Mail

MARTIAN IMPOSSIBLE

‘6½ minutes of terror’ as 12,300mph craft tries to land on Red Planet

- By James Tozer

IT’S been travelling through space for six months – but a $1billion Mars probe’s mission will tonight come down to ‘sixand-a-half minutes of terror’.

Nasa’s latest spacecraft is due to begin its descent to the Red Planet’s surface just before 8pm – with helpless scientists watching the final few moments.

All being well, the InSight probe should enter the Martian atmosphere at 12,300mph before an array of 12 thrusters attempts to slow it down to 5mph for a safe touchdown.

Experts hope the mission will be the first to unlock geological secrets of the planet’s hidden core, using a probe to dig 16ft (5m) beneath the surface. A seismomete­r containing sensors designed and made at Imperial College in London and tested at Oxford University will also examine the impact of earthquake­s and meteorite strikes.

But before that work begins, Nasa mission control in Pasadena, California, must endure what staff described as ‘six-and-ahalf minutes of terror’ between 7.47pm and 7.54pm as they monitor the final moments of the probe’s descent from 300million miles away.

Landings have proved a difficult hurdle for many missions. The Soviet Union never managed to land on Mars, and both attempts by the European Space Agency flopped.

But only one of Nasa’s previous eight attempts has failed. InSight, which blasted off from California in May, will rely entirely on its onboard computer to make last-second landing adjustment­s.

The eight-minute time delay with Earth means scientists will be as powerless as the hundreds watching the mission live on TV.

As well as the sophistica­ted instrument­s, there will be a good luck charm – a jar of peanuts. It stems from when Nasa ended a run of unsuccessf­ul missions in 1964 while anxious engineers munched on the snack. ‘That’s one of our traditions,’ said lead engineer Rob Grover. ‘We’ve had a number of successful landings in a row now. But you never know what Mars will throw at you.’

‘You never know what Mars will throw at you’

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