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Probes to explore Mercury from orbit

 
 
littlek
 
Reply Mon 14 Jan, 2008 11:13 am
Hello Mercury! A spacecraft will make three fly-bys of this planet as it slows to enter into its orbit. The first is set for this evening (Earth time).

Quote:
Messenger's first fly-by will:

* obtain the first detailed view of the hemisphere of the planet missed by Mariner 10 (it only saw 45% of the planet's surface)
* make the first measurements of the elemental composition of Mercury's surface
* use a laser altimeter to study the shape and topography of the planet
* take gravity measurements to try to understand better Mercury's internal structure


European probes will follow.
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Mon 14 Jan, 2008 08:21 pm
Bump.....
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Intrepid
 
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Reply Mon 14 Jan, 2008 11:28 pm
The Australian

NASA does fly-by of Mercury
By Will Dunham | January 15, 2008


A CAR-SIZED NASA probe has zoomed about 203km above the rocky, crater-scarred surface of Mercury, becoming the first spacecraft since 1975 to fly past the closest planet to the sun.

The US space agency's MESSENGER probe traveled at about 25,700kph as it passed over Mercury on a mission designed to resolve some of the mysteries about the solar system's innermost planet, officials said.

"So far, things look pretty good. The spacecraft was on the course we wanted it to be on," Michael Paul, a mission engineer, said.

It flew roughly along the equator and at a slightly higher altitude than originally planned, but the change had no negative effects, he said. He said the probe was briefly out of contact as it passed behind Mercury but communications were quickly re-established.

MESSENGER is scheduled to pass Mercury again this October and in September 2009, using the pull of the planet's gravity to guide it into position to begin a planned yearlong orbit of the planet in March 2011.

Mark Robinson of Arizona State University, a member of the mission's science team, said the closest approach was on the planet's "night side" - the one facing away from the sun.

The probe is due to begin transmitting back to Earth data it collected during the fly-by, NASA said. The agency hopes to have the first scientific results available for the public later this month.

The probe's equipment is gathering data on the mineral and chemical composition of Mercury's surface, its magnetic field, its surface topography and its interactions with the solar wind, according to scientists working on the project.

By the time the mission is completed, scientists also hope to get answers on why Mercury is so dense, its geological history, the structure of its iron-rich core and other issues.

MESSENGER stands for Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry and Ranging.

Launched in 2004, it already has flown past Venus twice and Earth once en route to Mercury.

"This was fantastic," NASA's Mr Paul said. "We were closer to the surface of Mercury than the International Space Station is to the Earth."

The only previous times Mercury was visited by a spacecraft were in 1974 and 1975 when NASA's Mariner 10 flew past it three times and mapped about 45 per cent of its surface.

With Pluto now considered a dwarf planet, Mercury is the solar system's smallest planet, with a diameter of 4880km, about a third that of Earth.

A surface feature of great interest to scientists is the Caloris basin, an impact crater about 1300km in diameter, one of the biggest such craters in our solar system. It likely was caused when an asteroid hit the planet long ago.

By studying material in the crater, scientists hope to learn about the subsurface of the planet.

Mercury experiences the largest swing in surface temperatures in our solar system. When its surface faces the sun, temperatures hit about 425C, but when its faces away from the sun they can plummet to -185C.
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littlek
 
  1  
Reply Wed 16 Jan, 2008 07:37 pm
From NASA:
MESSENGER

http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencePhotos/pics/EN0108826105M.png

And an image nabbed from space.com

http://a52.g.akamaitech.net/f/52/827/1d/www.space.com/images/080116-messenger-first-02.jpg
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Intrepid
 
  1  
Reply Thu 17 Jan, 2008 03:59 pm
The first photo could be mistaken for our moon. Very similar.
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