After extraordinary science findings and technological innovations, a NASA
spacecraft launched in 2004 to study Mercury will impact the planet’s surface,
most likely on April 30, after it runs out of propellant.
NASA’s MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging
(MESSENGER) spacecraft will impact the planet at more than 8,750 miles per hour
(3.91 kilometers per second) on the side of the planet facing away from Earth.
Due to the expected location, engineers will be unable to view in real time the
exact location of impact.
On Tuesday, mission operators in mission control at the Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, completed the
fourth in a series of orbit correction maneuvers designed to delay the
spacecraft’s impact into the surface of Mercury. The last maneuver is scheduled
for Friday, April 24.
"Following this last maneuver, we will finally declare the spacecraft out of
propellant, as this maneuver will deplete nearly all of our remaining helium
gas,” said Daniel O’Shaughnessy, mission systems engineer at APL. “At that
point, the spacecraft will no longer be capable of fighting the downward push of
the sun's gravity.”
Although Mercury is one of Earth’s nearest planetary neighbors, little was
known about the planet prior to the MESSENGER mission.
“For the first time in history we now have real knowledge about the planet
Mercury that shows it to be a fascinating world as part of our diverse solar
system,” said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator for the Science Mission
Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “While spacecraft operations
will end, we are celebrating MESSENGER as more than a successful mission. It’s
the beginning of a longer journey to analyze the data that reveals all the
scientific mysteries of Mercury.”
The spacecraft traveled more than six and a half years before it was inserted
into orbit around Mercury on March 18, 2011. The prime mission was to orbit the
planet and collect data for one Earth year. The spacecraft’s healthy
instruments, remaining fuel, and new questions raised by early findings resulted
in two approved operations extensions, allowing the mission to continue for
almost four years and resulting in more scientific firsts.
One key science finding in 2012 provided compelling support for the
hypothesis that Mercury harbors abundant frozen water and other volatile
materials in its permanently shadowed polar craters.
Data indicated the ice in Mercury's polar regions, if spread over an area the
size of Washington, would be more than two miles thick. For the first time,
scientists began seeing clearly a chapter in the story of how the inner planets,
including Earth, acquired water and some of the chemical building blocks for
life.
A dark layer covering most of the water ice deposits supports the theory that
organic compounds, as well as water, were delivered from the outer solar system
to the inner planets and may have led to prebiotic chemical synthesis and,
thusly, life on Earth.
“The water now stored in ice deposits in the permanently shadowed floors of
impact craters at Mercury’s poles most likely was delivered to the innermost
planet by the impacts of comets and volatile-rich asteroids,” said Sean Solomon,
the mission’s principal investigator, and director of Columbia University's
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, New York. “Those same impacts
also likely delivered the dark organic material.”
In addition to science discoveries, the mission provided many technological
firsts, including the development of a vital heat-resistant and highly
reflective ceramic cloth sunshade that isolated the spacecraft’s instruments and
electronics from direct solar radiation – vital to mission success given
Mercury’s proximity to the sun. The technology will help inform future designs
for planetary missions within our solar system.
“The front side of the sunshade routinely experienced temperatures in excess
of 300° Celsius (570° Fahrenheit), whereas the majority of components in its
shadow routinely operated near room temperature (20°C or 68°F),” said Helene
Winters, mission project manager at APL. “This technology to protect the
spacecraft’s instruments was a key to mission success during its prime and
extended operations.”
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