NASA and its international partners now have the go-ahead to begin
construction on a new Mars lander after it completed a successful Mission
Critical Design Review on Friday.
NASA’s Interior Exploration Using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat
Transport (InSight) mission will pierce beneath the Martian surface to study its
interior. The mission will investigate how Earth-like planets formed and
developed their layered inner structure of core, mantle and crust, and will
collect information about those interior zones using instruments never before
used on Mars.
InSight will launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, on the central California
coast near Lompoc, in March 2016. This will be the first interplanetary mission
ever to launch from California. The mission will help inform the agency’s goal
of sending a human mission to Mars in the 2030s.
InSight team leaders presented mission-design results last week to a NASA
review board, which approved advancing to the next stage of preparation.
“Our partners across the globe have made significant progress in getting to
this point and are fully prepared to deliver their hardware to system
integration starting this November, which is the next major milestone for the
project," said Tom Hoffman, InSight Project Manager of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, California. "We now move from doing the design and
analysis to building and testing the hardware and software that will get us to
Mars and collect the science that we need to achieve mission success."
To investigate the planet's interior, the stationary lander will carry a
robotic arm that will deploy surface and burrowing instruments contributed by
France and Germany. The national space agencies of France and Germany -- Centre
National d’Etudes Spatiales (CNES) and Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt
(DLR) -- are partnering with NASA by providing InSight's two main science
instruments.
The Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure (SEIS) will be built by CNES in
partnership with DLR and the space agencies of Switzerland and the United
Kingdom. It will measure waves of ground motion carried through the interior of
the planet, from "marsquakes" and meteor impacts. The Heat Flow and Physical
Properties Package, from DLR, will measure heat coming toward the surface from
the planet's interior.
"Mars actually offers an advantage over Earth itself for understanding how
habitable planetary surfaces can form," said Bruce Banerdt, InSight Principal
Investigator from JPL. "Both planets underwent the same early processes. But
Mars, being smaller, cooled faster and became less active while Earth kept
churning. So Mars better preserves the evidence about the early stages of rocky
planets' development."
The three-legged lander will go to a site near the Martian equator and
provide information for a planned mission length of 720 days -- about two years.
InSight adapts a design from the successful NASA Phoenix Mars Lander, which
examined ice and soil on far-northern Mars in 2008.
"We will incorporate many features from our Phoenix spacecraft into InSight,
but the differences between the missions require some differences in the InSight
spacecraft," said InSight Program Manager Stu Spath of Lockheed Martin Space
Systems Company, Denver, Colorado. "For example, the InSight mission duration is
630 days longer than Phoenix, which means the lander will have to endure a wider
range of environmental conditions on the surface."
Guided by images of the surroundings taken by the lander, InSight's robotic
arm will place the seismometer on the surface and then place a protective
covering over it to minimize effects of wind and temperature on the sensitive
instrument. The arm will also put the heat-flow probe in position to hammer
itself into the ground to a depth of 3 to 5 yards (2.7 to 4 1/2 meters).
Another experiment will use the radio link between InSight and NASA's Deep
Space Network antennas on Earth to precisely measure a wobble in Mars' rotation
that could reveal whether Mars has a molten or solid core. Wind and temperature
sensors from Spain's Centro de Astrobiologia and a pressure sensor will monitor
weather at the landing site, and a magnetometer will measure magnetic
disturbances caused by the Martian ionosphere.
InSight's international science team is made up of researchers from Austria,
Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, the United
Kingdom and the United States. JPL manages InSight for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington.
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