On Monday, Jan. 14, a
pioneering NASA spacecraft will be the first to visit Mercury in almost 33
years when it soars over the planet to explore and snap close-up images of
never-before-seen terrain. These findings could open new theories and
answer old questions in the study of the solar system.
The MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging
spacecraft, called MESSENGER, is the first mission sent to orbit the planet
closest to our sun. Before that orbit begins in 2011, the probe will make
three flights past the small planet, skimming as close as 124 miles above
Mercury's cratered, rocky surface. MESSENGER's cameras and other
sophisticated, high-technology instruments will collect more than 1,200
images and make other observations during this approach, encounter and
departure. It will make the first up-close measurements since Mariner 10
spacecraft's third and final flyby on March 16, 1975. When Mariner 10 flew
by Mercury in the mid-1970s, it surveyed only one hemisphere.
"This is raw scientific exploration and the suspense is building by the
day," said Alan Stern, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington. "What will MESSENGER see? Monday will tell the
tale."
This encounter will provide a critical gravity assist needed to keep
the spacecraft on track for its March 2011 orbit insertion, beginning an
unprecedented yearlong study of Mercury. The flyby also will gather
essential data for mission planning.
"During this flyby we will begin to image the hemisphere that has never
been seen by a spacecraft and Mercury at resolutions better than those
acquired by Mariner 10," said Sean C. Solomon, MESSENGER principal
investigator, Carnegie Institution of Washington. "Images will be in a
number of different color filters so that we can start to get an idea of
the composition of the surface."
One site of great interest is the Caloris basin, an impact crater about
800 miles in diameter, which is one of the largest impact basins in the
solar system.
"Caloris is huge, about a quarter of the diameter of Mercury, with
rings of mountains within it that are up to two miles high," said Louise
Prockter, the instrument scientist for the Mercury Dual Imaging System at
the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel. "Mariner
10 saw a little less than half of the basin. During this first flyby, we
will image the other side."
MESSENGER's instruments will provide the first spacecraft measurements
of the mineralogical and chemical composition of Mercury's surface. It also
will study the global magnetic field and improve our knowledge of the
gravity field from the Mariner 10 flyby. The long-wavelength components of
the gravity field provide key information about the planet's internal
structure, particularly the size of Mercury's core.
The flyby will provide an opportunity to examine Mercury's environment
in unique ways, not possible once the spacecraft begins orbiting the
planet. The flyby also will map Mercury's tenuous atmosphere with
ultraviolet observations and document the energetic particle and plasma of
Mercury's magnetosphere. In addition, the flyby trajectory will enable
unique particle and plasma measurements of the magnetic tail that sweeps
behind Mercury.
Launched Aug. 3, 2004, MESSENGER is slightly more than halfway through
its 4.9-billion mile journey. It already has flown past Earth once and
Venus twice. The spacecraft will use the pull of Mercury's gravity during
this month's pass and others in October 2008 and September 2009 to guide it
progressively closer to the planet's orbit. Insertion will be accomplished
with a fourth Mercury encounter in 2011.
The MESSENGER project is the seventh in NASA's Discovery Program of
low-cost, scientifically focused space missions. The Applied Physics
Laboratory designed, built and operates the spacecraft and manages the
mission for NASA.
Source: NASA