Nasa's Messenger Capsule to smash into Mercury and die, ending a life of pioneering discovery
'It’s like losing a member of the family,' the mission head has said about the loss
It’s been a wild ride for MESSENGER, the NASA spacecraft that has offered mankind its best insight into the mysteries of Mercury. Just 10 feet long and no heavier than a Friesian cow, the tiny ship has traveled 5 billion miles, flown by three planets and completed the first-ever map of the “first rock from the sun.”
That all comes to a crashing conclusion Thursday, when the ship is due to perish in a massive impact with the planet it so diligently documented, according to the space agency. MESSENGER is about 10 and a half years old.
“It’s like losing a member of the family,” mission head Sean Solomon toldScientific American.
NASA knew this day was coming. The craft ran out of propellant last winter and has been slowly spiraling toward Mercury’s surface ever since.
Since then, the only thing keeping MESSENGER aloft was the creativity of the scientists who run it. After exhausting the liquid propellant used to keep the craft in motion, the team jerry-rigged an alternative source of fuel from the helium used to maintain pressure inside the ship’s gas tanks.
It was the first time anyone had tried to extend a spacecraft’s life this way, Stewart Bushman, lead propulsion engineer for the mission, told Astronomy Magazine. Finding replacement fuel is so rarely necessary, since something else almost always goes wrong on a spacecraft first.
But MESSENGER’s life story has been one of defied expectations.
The spacecraft, whose name stands for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry and Ranging, launched in August 2004. It was the first mission in nearly 30 years dedicated to studying the planet closest to the sun. Its predecessor, Mariner 10, was able to photograph just half the planet in a handful of flybys before running out of fuel and losing radio contact with Earth.
This time, scientists said, the spacecraft wasn’t just going to zoom past Mercury and snap some photos. MESSENGER was scheduled to spend a full year in orbit around the little-studied planet, mapping its surface, probing its atmosphere and investigating its interior.
“It took technology more than 30 years … to bring us to the brink of discovering what Mercury is all about,” Solomon said in a State Department press release issued the day of the launch. “By the time this mission is done we will see Mercury as a much different planet than we think of it today.”
Solomon was right, possibly more so than he could have imagined.
After journeying 5 billion miles through space, conducting multiple flybys of Earth, Venus and Mars, MESSENGER pulled into Mercury’s orbit on March 17, 2011. A little over a week later, it sent home the first ever image of Mercury taken from orbit. The photo showed a vast, gray, pockmarked expanse of rock, seemingly even more barren than the moon.
This image, taken March 29, 2011, is the first ever obtained from a spacecraft in orbit around Mercury. But the MESSENGER mission revealed that there was much more to Mercury than meets the eye. Beneath that bland, gray exterior, the planet has a massive, spinning iron core that generates its magnetic field. Unlike Earth’s core, this one appears to be liquid and huge — about 85 percent of the planet’s radius.
That boiling liquid rock is entirely beneath the planet’s surface, but among MESSENGER’s other discoveries was that, in its early years, Mercuryseethed with volcanic activity. Scientists used to think that the planet lacked the “volatile compounds” needed for explosive eruptions, believing that such molecules were either fried or blasted away during Mercury’s formation. But evidence that volcanoes did explode, and that some of those “volatiles” still remain, meant that scientists had to reconsider their assumptions about the planet’s origin.
“This research is revolutionizing our thinking about the early history of the planets and satellites,” Jim Head, a MESSENGER mission co-investigator, said in a press release about the study.
Other surprises from MESSENGER’s four years in orbit include the observation of seasons within its barely-existent atmosphere, the realization that the planet is contracting as it cools and the discovery of unexplained, shallow “hollows” marring the planet’s surface.
One of the mission’s biggest headlines came in 2012, when MESSENGER provided absolute confirmation that there is ice on Mercury. Given the planet’s wispy atmosphere and dangerous proximity to the sun (Mercury’s orbit brings it three times closer than Earth’s and subjects it to solar rays that are 11 times as strong), it seemed a poor candidate for finding water, particularly in frozen form. But for years, telescope observations kept revealing strange bright patches at the planet’s poles.
MESSENGER gave scientists the first opportunity to examine those patches up close. What they found surprised them: Because the planet doesn’t tilt on its axis, there are pockets at the poles that never see sunlight. In those pockets, researchers found clumps of ice accumulated beneath a layer of dark, organic material. Not life, but something on the way to it.
“I don’t think anybody could count Mercury as habitable,” Solomon told Scientific American. But that organic material — “the ingredients for habitability,” as Solomon called it — must have come from somewhere. How it wound on Mars is a mystery space researchers are itching to solve.
“Those polar regions, I think, are calling out to people … and saying, ‘Send us another spacecraft, we have more stories to tell,’” Solomon told the LA Times.
All the while, MESSENGER took more than 270,000 images of Mercury’s surface, helping NASA to produce the first-ever complete map of the planet.
The year-long orbital mission was so successful that NASA extended it in 2012. The use of helium to propel the craft helped extend its lifespan even further, allowing scientists to collect more data. Even now, as the craft hurtles toward its doom, MESSENGER is beaming data to researchers back on Earth.
In this undated photo provided by NASA, technicians with The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Titusville, Fla., prepare the MESSESNGER spacecraft for a move to a hazardous processing facility in preparation for loading the spacecraft’s hypergolic propellants. (NASA via AP)
One of the last transmissions was a series of spectrometer images showing variations in the minerals that make up the planet’s crust.
Since Mercury has an insubstantial atmosphere, MESSENGER won’t burn up as it descends. Instead, it’ll crash into Mercury at a speed of about 2.5 miles per second, according to Scientific American, adding its own small impact crater to the hundreds that pock the planet’s surface.
It’s a bittersweet end for the researchers who have spent over a decade following the spacecraft from afar.
“We’re at the end of a really successful mission, and we can’t do anything anymore to stop it from doing what it naturally wants to do,” Thomas Zurbuchen, a member of MESSENGER’s science team, said in a statement. “The sun is pulling on it. The planet is pulling on it. It’s just physics. It has to crash.”
Copyright Washington Post
Life & Style blogs
-
How Old Do I Look: Microsoft’s super advanced age-guessing app is terrible at guessing how old celebrities are, too
-
Apple MacBook review: preposterously thin and extravagantly attractive, this is the best-designed laptop Apple has ever made
-
What do the emoji on Snapchat mean?
-
The 12 most sexually satisfied countries in the world revealed
-
Nasa might have successfully tested a warp drive that could carry people at speeds approaching that of light
-
Over 50,000 families shipped out of London boroughs in the past three years due to welfare cuts and soaring rents
-
EU asylum policy is 'a direct threat to our civilisation', says Nigel Farage
-
Indonesia executions live: 'Hysterical' families heard prisoners being shot dead by firing squad
-
General Election 2015: SNP and its activists 'openly racist' towards the English, Farage says
-
EU exit would hit UK economy much harder than neighbouring countries, study finds
-
General Election 2015: UK will be 'run for the wealthy and powerful' if Tories retain power, Labour warns
- 1 Which country would be hardest to invade?
- 2 The man who filmed the Freddie Gray video has been arrested at gunpoint
- 3 Royal baby: Duchess of Cambridge already planning a third child, oversharing uncle reveals
- 4 Royal baby girl born: Duchess of Cambridge's second child will be a princess thanks to Queen
- 5 David Cameron makes another gaffe: 'This election is all about my career... sorry, I mean country'
Framing Fashion with Oliver Proudlock
Watch the first video in our new series for tips on new trends and London's style scene.
Back to nature
Check out our insider’s tour of Menorca's beaches, from the accessible to the remote.
Win up to £15K to bring your idea to life
The Evening Standard has teamed with Born to find the next big innovation. Find out how you can win £15K to bring your idea to life...
The battle of Hallam
The hotly contested Sheffield seat has the most educated voters in the country. Will they show their displeasure at the Lib Dems’ tuition fee u-turn by ousting Nick Clegg?
Win £125 of glasses with Specsavers
Want to boost your spring look? Enter Specsavers competition now and be in the running to win £125 of glasses.
Europe's forgotten city back in premier league
We've teamed up with Hilton Garden Inn to give away a fantastic 3 night trip to Krakow
It’s always a good time to visit Barbados
Discover Barbados with this amazing promotion from Brilliant Barbados, giving visitors more than ever before.
Discover Tobago for FREE!!
We are offering one lucky reader the chance to win a seven night self-catering holiday for two. What are you waiting for? Enter now.
Voting Clever
Detailed polls show where certain seats can be won – or lost – by the power of the student vote. Those who use the polls strategically could really make a difference, writes Lucy Hodges
Health professionals create a design for life
A team at Sheffield Hallam University have designed a revolutionary new neck brace that could transform the lives of Motor Neurone Disease (MND) patients.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Independent Dating
iJobs Gadgets & Tech
Recruitment Genius: Software Developer - C# / ASP.NET / SQL
£17000 - £30000 per annum: Recruitment Genius: Developer required to join a bu...
Recruitment Genius: Software Consultant / 1st Line Support
£15000 - £25000 per annum: Recruitment Genius: As your knowledge grows you wil...
Ashdown Group: Systems Engineer - Linux - Central London
£40000 - £48000 per annum + Benefits: Ashdown Group: Systems Engineer - Linux ...
Recruitment Genius: Technical Support and Sales Engineer - UC / M2M / IoT
£20000 - £30000 per annum: Recruitment Genius: This leading provider of Cloud ...