| Historic return to planet Mercury set for January 14, 2008 |
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| Written by William Atkins | |
| Saturday, 12 January 2008 | |
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The first spacecraft to approach Mercury was NASA’s Mariner 10, which mapped about 45% of the planet’s surface between 1974 and 1975.
MESSENGER is short for “MEcury Surface, Space ENvironment, Geochemistry and Ranging). Specifically, MESSENGER will study the composition of its surface, the geologic history of the planet, its magnetic field and core, its gravitational field, and the poles of the planet. The mission is also historic because MESSENGER will become the first human spacecraft to orbit Mercury. The Mariner 10 mission only flew by the planet, and was not inserted into orbit about the planet. The January 14th flyby is the first flyby of the planet by the MESSENGER craft. Its closest approach on this date is scheduled to be at 2:04 p.m. Eastern Standard Time (EST) (0704 GMT) as it approaches the planet by around 124 miles (200 kilometers). The last flyby of Mercury was done by Mariner 10 on March 16, 1975. The flyby by MESSENGER will be the first of three flybys—January 14, October 6, both in 2008, and September 29, 2009—that will help to slow down the spacecraft so that it can accomplish an insertion into orbit about the planet on March 18, 2011. However, the three flybys are important not only to help the spacecraft make its orbit about the planet. They are also important to astronomers who want to take measurements of the planet. During the flybys the cameras onboard MESSENGER will take hundreds of images of Mercury while approaching, encountering, and leaving the vicinity of the planet. The MESSENGER mission is also very important because over thirty years of scientific advancements since Mariner 10 will allow scientists to learn much more about the planet than what is currently known.
Its instruments will provide the first measurements of the chemical composition of the surface of Mercury. Spectrometers (instruments that measure radiation spectrum) onboard the spacecraft will help to pinpoint the different types of minerals on the planet. Instruments to measure the gravitational field of the planet will help determine the size of Mercury's core and internal structure.
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