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Messenger, which cost NASA $446 million, was launched in 2004. Next month it should start transmitting pictures and investigate Mercury's mysterious magnetic field and unusual density. "This is when the real mission begins," Messenger chief scientist Sean Solomon said an hour after Messenger was safely in Mercury's orbit. "We are really ready to learn about one of Earth's nearest neighbors for the first time." For example, Solomon said Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars formed at the same time, but Mercury "came out very different." "Mercury is a planet where there are many things going on," Solomon said. ___ Online: Messenger spacecraft: http://bit.ly/eqUYR8
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