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NASA
Spacecraft Streams Back Surprises From Mercury
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Credit:
NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington
The recent flyby of Mercury
by NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft has given scientists an entirely
new look at a planet once thought to have characteristics similar
to those of Earth's moon. Researchers are amazed by the wealth of
images and data that show a unique world with a diversity of
geological processes and a very different magnetosphere from the
one discovered and sampled more than 30 years ago.
After
a journey of more than 2 billion miles and three and a half
years, NASA's Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry,
and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft made its first flyby on Jan.
14. MESSENGER is the first mission sent to orbit the planet
closest to our sun. The spacecraft's cameras and other
sophisticated, high-technology instruments collected more than
1,200 images and made other science observations. Data included
the first up-close measurements of Mercury since the Mariner 10
spacecraft's third and final flyby on March 16, 1975.
"This
flyby allowed us to see a part of the planet never before viewed
by spacecraft, and our little craft has returned a gold mine of
exciting data," said Sean Solomon, MESSENGER's principal
investigator, Carnegie Institution of Washington. "From the
perspectives of spacecraft performance and maneuver accuracy,
this encounter was near-perfect, and we are delighted that all of
the science data are now on the ground."
Unlike the
moon, MESSENGER showed that Mercury has huge cliffs with
structures snaking up hundreds of miles across the planet's face.
These cliffs preserve a record of patterns of fault activity from
early in the planet's history. The spacecraft also revealed
impact craters that appear very different from lunar
craters.
Instruments provided a topographic profile of
craters and other geological features on the night side of
Mercury. The spacecraft also discovered a unique feature that
scientists dubbed "The Spider." This formation never
has been seen on Mercury before and nothing like it has been
observed on the moon. It lies in the middle of a large impact
crater called the Caloris basin and consists of more than one
hundred narrow, flat-floored troughs radiating from a complex
central region.
"The Spider has a crater near its
center, but whether that crater is related to the original
formation or came later is not clear at this time," said
James Head, science team co-investigator at Brown University,
Providence, R.I.
Now that MESSENGER has shown scientists
the full extent of the Caloris basin, its diameter has been
revised upward from the Mariner 10 estimate of 800 miles to
perhaps as large as 960 miles from rim to rim. The plains inside
the Caloris basin are distinctive and more reflective than the
exterior plains. Impact basins on the moon have opposite
characteristics.
The magnetosphere and magnetic field of
Mercury during the MESSENGER flyby appeared to be different from
the Mariner 10 observations. MESSENGER found the planet's
magnetic field was generally quiet but showed several signatures
indicating significant pressure within the
magnetosphere.
Magnetic fields like Earth's and their
resulting magnetospheres are generated by electrical dynamos in
the form of a liquid metallic outer core deep in the planet's
center. Of the four terrestrial planets, only Mercury and Earth
exhibit such a phenomenon. The magnetic field deflects the solar
wind from the sun, producing a protective bubble around Earth
that shields the surface of our planet from those energetic
particles and other sources farther out in the galaxy. Similar
variations are expected for Mercury's magnetic field, but the
precise nature of its field and the time scales for internal
changes are unknown. The next two flybys and the yearlong orbital
phase will shed more light on these processes.
MESSENGER's
suite of instruments also has provided insight into the mineral
makeup of the surface terrain and detected ultraviolet emissions
from sodium, calcium and hydrogen in Mercury's exosphere. The
spacecraft explored the sodium-rich exospheric "tail,"
which extends more than 25,000 miles from the planet.
"We
should keep this treasure trove of data in perspective. With two
flybys to come and an intensive orbital mission to follow, we are
just getting started to go where no one has been before,"
said project scientist Ralph McNutt of the Applied Physics
Laboratory, Laurel, Md.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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