NASA formally retires Mars InSight lander after 4-year mission
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[December 22, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - NASA has formally retired its Mars InSight
lander, the first robotic probe specially designed to study the deep
interior of a distant world, four years after it arrived on the surface
of the red planet, the U.S. space agency announced on Wednesday.
Mission controllers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los
Angeles determined the mission was over when two consecutive attempts to
re-establish radio contact with the lander failed, a sign that InSight's
solar-powered batteries had run out of energy.
NASA predicted in late October that the spacecraft would reach the end
of its operational life in a matter of weeks due to increasingly heavy
accumulations of dust on its solar panels, depleting the ability of its
batteries to recharge.
JPL engineers will continue to listen for a signal from the lander, just
in case, but hearing from InSight again is unlikely, NASA said. The
three-legged stationary probe last communicated with Earth on Dec. 15.
InSight landed on Mars in late November 2018 with instruments designed
to detect planetary seismic rumblings never before measured anywhere but
Earth, and its original two-year mission was later extended to four.
From its perch in a vast and relatively flat plain called Elysium
Planitia just north of the planet's equator, the lander has helped
scientists gain new understanding of Mars' internal structure.
Researchers said InSight's data revealed the thickness of the planet's
outer crust, the size and density of its inner core and the structure of
the mantle that lies in between.
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A life-size model of the spaceship
Insight, NASA's first robotic lander dedicated to studying the deep
interior of Mars, is shown at Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in
Pasadena, California, U.S. November 26, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
One of InSight's chief accomplishments was establishing that the red
planet is, indeed, seismically active, recording more than 1,300
marsquakes. It also measured seismic waves generated by meteorite
impacts.
"The seismic data alone from this discovery program mission offers
tremendous insights not just into Mars but other rocky bodies,
including Earth," said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator of
NASA's science mission directorate.
One such impact a year ago was found to have gouged boulder-sized
chunks of water ice surprisingly close to Mars' equator.
Even as InSight retires, a more recent robotic visitor to the red
planet, NASA's science rover Perseverance, continues to prepare a
collection of Martian mineral samples for future analysis on Earth.
This week, Perseverance deposited the first of 10 sample tubes it
was directed to leave at a surface collection site on Mars as a
backup cache, in case the primary supply stored in the rover's belly
cannot for some reason be transferred as planned to a retrieval
spacecraft in the future, NASA said.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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