A NASA spacecraft on Mars is headed for a dusty demise.
The Insight lander is losing power because of all the dust on its solar
panels. NASA said Tuesday it will keep using the spacecraft’s seismometer to
register marsquakes until the power peters out, likely in July. Then flight
controllers will monitor InSight until the end of this year, before calling
everything off.
“There really hasn’t been too much doom and gloom on the team. We’re really
still focused on operating the spacecraft,” said Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s
Bruce Banerdt, the principal scientist.
Since landing on Mars in 2018, InSight has detected more than 1,300
marsquakes; the biggest one, a magnitude 5, occurred two weeks ago.
It will be NASA’s second Mars lander lost to dust: A global dust storm took
out Opportunity in 2018. In InSight’s case, it’s been a gradual gathering of
dust, especially over the past year.
NASA’s two other functioning spacecraft on the Martian surface — rovers
Curiosity and Perseverance — are still going strong thanks to nuclear power.
The space agency may rethink solar power in the future for Mars, said
planetary science director Lori Glaze, or at least experiment with new
panel-clearing tech or aim for the less-stormy seasons.
InSight currently is generating one-tenth of the power from the sun that it
did upon arrival. Deputy project manager Kathya Zamora Garcia said the
lander initially had enough power to run an electric oven for one hour and
40 minutes; now it’s down to 10 minutes max.
The InSight team anticipated this much dust buildup, but hoped a gust wind
of wind or dust devil might clean off the solar panels. That has yet to
happen, despite several thousand whirlwinds coming close.
“None of them have quite hit us dead-on yet enough to blow the dust off the
panels,” Banerdt told reporters.
Another science instrument, dubbed the mole, was supposed to burrow 16 feet
(5 meters) underground to measure the internal temperature of Mars. But the
German digger never got deeper than a couple feet (a half-meter) because of
the unexpected composition of the red dirt, and it finally was declared dead
at the beginning of last year.
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Space & Astrophysics
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