MESSENGER
Set for Historic Mercury Flyby
NASA
will return to Mercury for the first time in almost 33 years on January 14, 2008,
when the MESSENGER spacecraft makes its first flyby of the Suns closest
neighbor, capturing images of large portions of the planet never before seen.
The
probe will make its closest approach to Mercury at 2:04 p.m. EST that day, skimming
200 kilometers (124 miles) above its surface. This encounter will provide a critical
gravity assist needed to keep the spacecraft on track for its 2011 orbit insertion
around Mercury.
The
MESSENGER Science Team is extremely excited about this flyby, says Dr. Sean
C. Solomon, MESSENGER principal investigator, from the Carnegie Institution of
Washington. We are about to enjoy our first close-up view of Mercury in
more than three decades, and a successful gravity assist will ensure that MESSENGER
remains on the trajectory needed to place it into orbit around the innermost planet
for the first time.
During
the flyby, the probes instruments will make the first up-close measurements
of the planet since Mariner 10s third and final flyby of Mercury on March
16, 1975, and will gather data essential to planning the MESSENGER missions
orbital phase. MESSENGERs seven scientific instruments will begin to address
the mission goals of:
mapping
the elemental and mineralogical composition of Mercurys surface;
imaging
globally the surface at a resolution of hundreds of meters or better;
determining
the structure of the planets magnetic field;
measuring the planets
gravitational field structure; and
characterizing exospheric neutral particles
and magnetospheric ions and electrons.
A Close-up of Mercury
The
cameras onboard MESSENGER will take more than 1,200 images of Mercury from approach
through encounter and departure. When the Mariner 10 spacecraft did its
flybys in the mid-1970s, it saw only one hemisphere a little less than
half the planet, notes Dr. L. M. Prockter, instrument scientist for the
Mercury Dual Imaging System, and a scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md. During this flyby we will begin
to image the hemisphere that has never been seen by a spacecraft and at resolutions
that are comparable to or better than those acquired by Mariner 10 and in a number
of different color filters so that we can start to get an idea of the composition
of the surface.
One
site of great interest is the Caloris basin, an impact feature about 1,300 kilometers
(808 miles) in diameter and one of the largest impact basins in the solar system.
Caloris is huge, about a quarter of the diameter of Mercury, with rings
of mountains within it that are up to three kilometers high, says Prockter.
Mariner 10 saw a little less than half of it. During this first flyby, we
will image the other side of Caloris. These impact basins act like giant natural
drills, pulling up material from underneath the surface and spreading it out around
the crater. By looking through different color filters we can start to understand
what the composition of the Caloris basin may be and learn something about the
subsurface of Mercury.
MESSENGER
instruments will provide the first spacecraft measurements of the mineralogical
and chemical composition of Mercurys surface. The visible-near infrared
and ultraviolet-visible spectrometers will measure surface reflectance spectra
that will reveal important mineral species. Gamma-ray, X-ray, and neutron spectrometer
measurements will provide insight into elemental composition.
During
the flyby, Doppler measurements will provide the first glimpse of Mercurys
gravity field structure since Mariner 10. The long-wavelength components of the
gravity field will yield key information on the planets internal structure,
particularly the size of Mercurys core.
The
encounter provides an opportunity to examine Mercurys environment in ways
not possible from orbit because of operational constraints. The flyby will yield
low-altitude measurements of Mercurys magnetic field near the planets
equator. These observations will complement measurements that will be obtained
during the later orbital phase.
The
flyby is an opportunity to get a jump start on mapping the exosphere with ultraviolet
observations and documenting the energetic particle and plasma population of Mercurys
magnetosphere. In addition, the flyby trajectory enables measurements of the particle
and plasma characteristics of Mercurys magnetotail, which will not be possible
from Mercury orbit.
MESSENGER
is slightly more than halfway through a 4.9-billion mile (7.9-billion kilometer)
journey to Mercury orbit that includes more than 15 trips around the Sun. It has
already flown past Earth once (August 2, 2005) and Venus twice (October 24, 2006,
and June 5, 2007). Three passes of Mercury, in January 2008, October 2008, and
September 2009, will use the pull of the planets gravity to guide MESSENGER
progressively closer to Mercurys orbit, so that orbit insertion can be accomplished
at the fourth Mercury encounter in March 2011.
The
complexity of this mission, with its numerous flybys and multitude of maneuvers,
requires close and constant attention, says MESSENGER project manager P.
D. Bedini, of APL. MESSENGER is being driven by a team of extremely talented
and dedicated engineers and scientists who are fully engaged and excited by the
discoveries before them.
The
MESSENGER project is the seventh in NASAs Discovery Program of low-cost,
scientifically focused space missions. Solomon leads the mission as principal
investigator; APL manages the mission for NASAs Science Mission Directorate
and designed, built, and operates the MESSENGER spacecraft. MESSENGERs science
instruments were built by APL; NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.;
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; and the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space
Physics at the University of Colorado, Boulder; with the support of subcontractors
across the United States and Europe. GenCorp Aerojet, Sacramento, Calif., and
Composite Optics Inc., San Diego, Calif., respectively, provided MESSENGERs
propulsion system and composite structure.-Johns Hopkins University