Messenger closes in on
Mercury crash-landing
After more than a decade in space and four years orbiting
Mercury, Nasa's Messenger mission is set to reach its explosive conclusion.
The spacecraft is expected to crash into the planet's surface at
20:46 BST on Thursday; its last fuel was burnt in a final manoeuvre on 24
April.
After reaching Mercury in 2011, Messenger has far exceeded its
primary mission plan of one year in orbit.
It is only slowly losing altitude but will hit at 8,750mph
(14,000km/h).
That means the 513kg craft, which is only 3m across, will blast
a 16m crater into an area near the planet's north pole, according to
scientists' calculations.
The
high-speed collision, 12 times faster than sound, will obliterate the
history-making craft. And it will only happen because Mercury has no thick
atmosphere to burn up incoming objects; for this same reason the planet is
struck by similarly-sized meteors once every month or two - and they arrive ten
times faster..
This
picture was snapped on 26 April, two days after Messenger's final manoeuvre
During its twice-extended mission, Messenger (MErcury Surface,
Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging) transformed our understanding of
Mercury. It sent back more than 270,000 images and 10 terabytes of scientific
measurements.
It found evidence for water ice hiding in the planet's shadowy
polar craters, and discovered that Mercury's magnetic field is bizarrely
off-centre, shifted along the planet's axis by 10% of its diameter.
Skimming the surface
Messenger traces a highly elliptical orbit around Mercury,
drifting out to a distance of nearly twice the planet's diameter before
swinging to within 60 miles (96km) at closest approach. To maintain this
pattern in the face of interference from the Sun, it needed a blast of engine
power every few months - but its fuel tanks are now empty.
After circling the planet more than 3,000 times, Messenger will
make its penultimate pass at a distance of between 300 and 600 metres - one or
two times the height of the Eiffel Tower. This will happen at about 13:00 BST
on Thursday.
"If you could see that, it would be a real spectacle,"
said Jim Raines, the instrument scientist on the craft's FIPS instrument (Fast
Imaging Plasma Spectrometer) and a physicist at the University of Michigan.
"It would cross the horizon in just a second or two, flying low overhead
at ten times the speed of a supersonic fighter."The next time it swings back close to Mercury's surface, eight
hours later, it will be curtains for Messenger; the probe will run aground near
a 370km basin called Shakespeare - made by a much earlier, much bigger impact.
"It's a pretty flat area of the planet," said Nancy
Chabot, the instrument scientist on the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS),
Messenger's twin cameras. "It's going to be a skimming impact."
But it will leave a mark.
"It will probably be an oblique crater... because the
impact angle will be so steep, so grazing to the surface. But at over 8,000
miles per hour, it's going to make a crater."
The impact will happen on the side of the planet facing away
from Earth. This puts the craft out of contact, and means it will probably
carry more than 1,000 unseen images to its final, explosive resting place.
MDIS can take hundreds of photos every day. Earlier this month,
mission scientistsreleased fresh images which superimposed
years of spectrometry data about the chemistry of the planet's surface,
illustrated by different colours, onto black-and-white images built up from
thousands of smaller MDIS photos.
Proud achievements
The planet has been mapped and studied to a level of detail far
beyond the original mission plan. Many of the results themselves have also been
surprising.
"A lot of people didn't give this spacecraft much of a
chance of even getting to Mercury, let alone going into orbit and then
gathering data for four years instead of the original scheduled one-year
mission," said William McClintock from the University of Colorado Boulder,
principal investigator on MASCS (the Mercury Atmospheric and Surface Composition
Spectrometer, another of the seven scientific instruments on board).
"In the end, most of what we considered to be gospel about
Mercury turned out to be a little different than we thought."
Dr Chabot remembers the tension of processing the first image
ever recorded by a spacecraft orbiting Mercury, back in 2011. She had only
recently taken over as the instrument scientist on MDIS.
"It was exciting but for me personally it was also a bit
stressful," Dr Chabot, who works at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics
Laboratory, told the BBC. "But then the first image came back and it
looked amazing and beautiful, and we realised we were here at Mercury to stay.
I take a lot of pride in that image."
Despite being able to look back with pride, Dr Raines said this
is still a sad day for Messenger scientists.
"Pretty much all the instruments are still doing great, so
that makes it a little harder," he told BBC News. But the mission was
always going to be limited by the fuel needed to maintain its difficult orbit.
"To be honest, I've seen this day coming for a long time
and it's just one of these things that I've not been looking forward to. I'm
really going to be sad to see it go."
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