NASA
Spots Mysterious 'Spider' on Mercury
Wednesday,
January 30, 2008
By
Clara Moskowitz
NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution
of Washington
Jan.
14: A strangely-formed impact crater on Mercury's Caloris basin, as seen by the
MESSENGER space probe.
Jan.
14: A strangely-formed impact crater on Mercury's Caloris basin, as seen by the
MESSENGER space probe.
A
whole new side of Mercury has been revealed in pictures taken by NASA's MESSENGER
probe, which flew by the tiny planet two weeks ago in the first mission to Mercury
in more than three decades.
MESSENGER
skimmed only 124 miles (200 kilometers) over Mercury's surface on Jan. 14, in
the first of three passes it will make before settling into orbit March 18, 2011.
The
photos, released today, include one of a feature the scientists informally call
"the spider," which appears to be an impact crater surrounded by more
than 50 cracks in the surface radiating from its center.
Scientists
are perplexed by this structure, which is unlike anything observed elsewhere in
the solar system.
"It's
a real mystery, a very unexpected find," said Louise Prockter, an instrument
scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, which built
the probe for the $446 million NASA mission.
She
said whatever event created the spider "is anybody's guess," but suggested
perhaps a volcanic intrusion beneath the planet's surface led to the formation
of the troughs.
The
last time NASA sent a probe to Mercury was in 1975, when the Mariner 10 spacecraft
flew by the planet three times.
MESSENGER'S
first flyby gave scientists the first glimpses of Mercury's hidden side, the 55
percent of its surface that was left uncharted by Mariner 10.
MESSENGER,
short for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging, also
measured another peculiar element of Mercury its magnetic field.
Earth
has a magnetic field surrounding it that acts as a protective bubble shielding
the surface from cosmic rays and solar storms. But scientists were shocked when
Mariner 10 discovered a magnetic field at Mercury, too.
"The
only other example in our solar system of an Earth-like magnetosphere is tiny
Mercury," said Sean C. Solomon, MESSENGER Principal Investigator from the
Carnegie Institution of Washington.
MESSENGER
was able to fly through the magnetic field and take detailed measurements that
scientists hope to use to discover the origins of the inexplicable magnetosphere.
Scientists
have been poring over more than 1,200 new images sent by seven instruments on
the probe, and they are excited to gain new insight into the composition of Mercury's
surface, the planet's history, and where its atmosphere comes from.
"On
the eve of the encounter I couldn't sleep at all," said Robert Strom, a MESSENGER
science team member who also worked on the Mariner 10 mission. "I've waited
30 years for this. It didn't disappoint at all. I was astounded at the quality
of these images. It dawned on me that this is a whole new planet that we're looking
at."
The
satellite will further probe Mercury's mysteries in a second pass over the planet
in October, followed by a third flyby in September 2009.
The
probe has traveled 4.9 billion miles (7.9 billion-kilometers) since it launched
in August 2004. On its journey it soared by Earth once and Venus twice, offering
gorgeous views of these planets as well.
In
2011 MESSENGER will become the first spacecraft to orbit the closest planet to
the Sun.