TAMPA: Nasa is counting down to a nail-biting touchdown on Monday of the $993 million Mars InSight, the first spacecraft to listen for quakes and study the inner workings of another rocky planet.
No one is on board the spacecraft, which launched nearly seven months ago and has travelled some 300 million miles (482 million kilometres).
But part of its mission is to inform efforts to one day send human explorers to the Red Planet, which Nasa hopes to do by the 2030s.
The lander is the first to reach Mars since 2012, when Nasa’s Curiosity rover touched down to scour the surface and analyse rocks for signs that life forms may once have inhabited Earth’s neighbour, now a frigid and dry planet.
InSight must survive tense entry into Mars’ atmosphere, travelling at a speed of 12,300 miles (19,800 kilometres) per hour and swiftly slowing to just five mph (eight kph).
This entry, descent and landing phase begins at 11:47 am in California — and is only half-jokingly referred to at Nasa as “Six and a Half Minutes of Terror.” Of 43 missions launched towards Mars, only 18 have made it intact — a success rate of around 40 per cent. All those that made it came from the United States.
“Going to Mars is really, really hard,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Nasa science mission directorate.
“The exciting part is we are building on the success of the best team that has ever landed on this planet, which is the Nasa team with its contractors and its collaborators.”
French seismometer
The name InSight is derived from “Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport.” The spacecraft itself stands about waist high, at 3.5 feet (one meter), and once its solar arrays are deployed they will span 20 feet.
Fully fuelled, InSight weighs more than 800 pounds (360 kg), about the same as a Harley Davidson motorcycle.
Its central instrument is a quake-sensing seismometer that was made by the French Space Agency (CNES).
“This is the only Nasa mission until now which is conceived around a foreign-made instrument,” Jean-Yves Le Gall, president of CNES, said.
“So it’s a mission that is fundamentally for the United States, for France and for improving our understanding of Mars.”
The six quake sensors on board are so sensitive they should reveal the smallest tremors on Mars, such as the faint pull of its moon Phobos, impacts from meteors, and possibly evidence of volcanic activity.
Seismology has taught humanity much about the formation of Earth some 4.5 billion years ago, but much of the Earth-based evidence has been lost to the recycling of the crust, driven by plate tectonics. This process doesn’t exist on Mars.
The spacecraft also has a self-hammering probe that can burrow as deep as 10-16 feet (3-5 meters), offering the first precise measurement of below-ground temperatures on Mars and how much heat escapes from its interior.
Published in Dawn, November 24th, 2018