Messenger Spacecraft Reveals a Very Dynamic Planet Mercury
Posted on: Thursday, 30 April 2009, 13:23 CDT
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Analyses of these new findings and more are reported in four papers published in the
"This second Mercury flyby provided a number of new findings," said
The spacecraft also made the first detection of magnesium in Mercury's thin atmosphere, known as an exosphere. This observation and other data confirm that magnesium is an important constituent of Mercury's surface materials.
The probe's Mercury Atmospheric and Surface Composition Spectrometer instrument detected the magnesium. Finding magnesium was not surprising to scientists, but seeing it in the amounts and distribution observed was unexpected. The instrument also measured other exospheric constituents, including calcium and sodium.
"This is an example of the kind of individual discoveries that the science team will piece together to give us a new picture of how the planet formed and evolved," said
The variability that the spacecraft observed in Mercury's magnetosphere, the volume of space dominated by the planet's magnetic field, so far supports the hypothesis that the great day-to-day changes in Mercury's atmosphere may be a result of changes in the shielding provided by the magnetosphere.
"The spacecraft observed a radically different magnetosphere at Mercury during its second flyby compared with its earlier
The spacecraft's discovery of the impact basin, called Rembrandt, is the first time scientists have seen terrain well exposed on the floor of a large impact basin on Mercury. Landforms such as those revealed on the floor of Rembrandt usually are buried completely by volcanic flows.
"This basin formed about 3.9 billion years ago, near the end of the period of heavy bombardment of the inner solar system," said
Half of Mercury was unknown until a little more than a year ago. Globes of the planet were blank on one side. Spacecraft images have enabled scientists to see 90 percent of the planet's surface at high resolution. The spacecraft's nearly global imaging coverage of the surface after the second flyby gives scientists fresh insight into how the planet's crust was formed.
"After mapping the surface, we see that approximately 40 percent is covered by smooth plains," said
Scientists continue to examine data from the first two flybys and are preparing to gather more information from a third flyby of the planet on
"The third Mercury flyby is our final dress rehearsal for the main performance of our mission, the insertion of the probe into orbit around Mercury in
The MESSENGER project is the seventh in NASA's Discovery Program of low-cost, scientifically focused missions. The
For more information about the Mercury mission, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/messenger
SOURCE NASA
Source: PR Newswire
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