NASA’s MESSENGER set to orbit Mercury
March 9th, 2011 - 1:59 pm ICT by ANILondon, Mar 9 (ANI): After passing Earth once and Venus twice, NASA’s MESSENGER is now set to orbit the Solar System’s innermost planet-Mercury.
If everything goes as expected, the craft will reach its goal on 18th March, dipping as close as 200 kilometres to Mercury’s surface, reports Nature.
“All of us are extremely excited to have reached this milestone and we are anxious to learn the secrets that Mercury will finally reveal to us,” said Sean Solomon, a geophysicist at the Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington DC and the mission’s principal investigator.
Earlier glimpses suggested that the planet is far from the inert lump of rock that scientists once imagined.
MESSENGER (Mercury surface, space environment, geochemistry and ranging) is only the second spacecraft to reach the planet. The first, Mariner 10, made three fleeting passes in 1974 and 1975 and glimpsed only 45 percent of the planet’s surface.
The new mission has already transformed this view by imaging 98 percent of Mercury during the 2008 and 2009 fly-bys. Once in orbit, MESSENGER will map the entire surface, recording its topography and composition on scales as small as a few tens of metres.
Over the one-year mission, MESSENGER will also measure changes in Mercury’s tenuous atmosphere of hydrogen, helium and metal ions, information that might reveal how the thin atmosphere is replenished as ions escape into space.
The oversized core is somehow responsible for Mercury’s weak but intriguing magnetic field. First observed by Mariner 10, the field could be a frozen remnant from a geologically active past. During its fly-bys, however, MESSENGER detected changes in the field, suggesting that some of Mercury’s core might be molten. (ANI)
- NASA spacecraft becomes first to enter Mercury orbit - Mar 18, 2011
- NASA's Messenger spacecraft begins historic orbit around mercury - Mar 18, 2011
- NASA's Messenger fetches first orbital photo of Mercury - Mar 30, 2011
- NASA's Messenger probe reveals new information about Mercury - Jul 16, 2010
- NASA's MESSENGER begins historic orbit around Mercury - Mar 18, 2011
- NASA's Messenger set to solve tantalizing mysteries about Mercury - Mar 16, 2011
- Violent Magnetic Storms Discovered In Mercury - Jul 18, 2010
- NASA's Messenger spacecraft prepares for final pass by Mercury on September 29 - Sep 24, 2009
- 1 billion year old crater on Mercury proof of recent volcanism - Oct 22, 2009
- NASA: Mercury is home to violent magnetic storms - Jul 18, 2010
- NASA's MESSENGER reveals more hidden territory on Mercury - Nov 04, 2009
- NASA photographs craters that resemble Mickey Mouse on Mercury - Jun 18, 2012
- NASA's Messenger sees iron and titanium on Mercury - Nov 05, 2009
- First Mercury mission to reveal mysterious planet's secrets - Feb 02, 2011
- Mercury found to have comet-like appearance - Sep 23, 2010
Tags: carnegie institution, first mariner, geochemistry, geophysicist, glimpses, imaging 98, innermost planet, magnetic field, mariner 10, mercury surface, metal ions, mission messenger, nasa, planet mercury, principal investigator, remnant, space environment, surface space, tenuous atmosphere, thin atmosphere