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Spacecraft to Begin Journey to Mercury
AP ^ | 7/25/04 | Marcia Dunn

Posted on 07/25/2004 7:06:41 PM PDT by LibWhacker

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - NASA (news - web sites) is about to embark on its hottest mission ever, to Mercury. The Messenger spacecraft, to be launched next week, will be blasted by up to 700-degree heat as it orbits the tiny planet closest to the sun — so close that it would be as though 11 suns were beating down on Earth.

Remarkably, the only thing between the probe's room-temperature science instruments and the blistering sun and pizza-oven heat will be a handmade ceramic-cloth quilt just one-quarter of an inch thick.

"If it doesn't stay toward the sun, it will fry everything," said Neal Bachtell, mechanical technician and master quilter.

Bachtell used X-Acto blades to cut the 3M Nextel fabric and then — relying on sewing tips from his mother — used an industrial sewing machine to stitch the off-white pieces together into an 8-by-9-foot quilt, using Teflon-coated fiberglass thread. It was a nasty job; the itchy, ceramic-fiber cloth sheds and is bad to inhale.

"Neal, you're making history today, buddy," Jack Ercol, the project's lead thermal engineer, said during a mid-July spacecraft showing in an ultraclean room.

"It's cool, it's cool," Bachtell replied.

Messenger will be the first spacecraft ever to orbit Mercury and the first in more than 30 years to come close. Even at that, members of the Johns Hopkins University spacecraft team assembled in Cape Canaveral realize this mission can't compete with Mars and its rovers, or Saturn and its newly arrived sentry, Cassini.

But there are plenty of cool facts about this red-hot mission, besides the off-the-charts-SPF sunscreen that was baked for days in ground testing.

You can see yourself in Messenger's twin solar wings, made up of a couple thousand little mirrors to reflect the intense sunlight in Mercury's neighborhood. The wings are two-thirds mirrors and just one-third electricity-producing solar cells.

Diode heat pipes burrowed into the extraordinarily insulated spacecraft will radiate internal heat from all the electronics. When Messenger passes between the sun and Mercury and it gets really sweltering — not too often and not for long because of Messenger's cleverly conceived flight plan — these pipes will shut down and the boxy craft will be like a house with all the windows closed on a steamy afternoon.

"It's basically a Thermos bottle," Ercol explained.

"We're actually taking on a very brutal mission from the standpoint of the sun and then from the orbiting standpoint because the planet itself is very hot."

Even though Mercury is 50 million miles from Earth at closest approach, Messenger will travel 5 billion miles to get there. It's technologically infeasible to fly straight to Mercury, a trip of a few months, and so the spacecraft must swing once past Earth, twice past Venus and thrice past Mercury before slowing down enough to slip into orbit around Mercury.

Estimated arrival time: March 2011.

Mariner 10 was NASA's last Mercury lookout. Equipped with an umbrella for shade, it flew by Mercury three times in 1974 and 1975, providing the first up-close pictures of the planet. The pictures are poor by today's standards; Messenger's photos will be superior by far.

The $427 million Messenger mission is part of NASA's bargain-focused Discovery program. That includes the launch aboard an unmanned rocket in the wee hours of Aug. 2, and all the scientific analysis seven years from now.

So why Mercury? Why now?

The technology for designing a spacecraft capable of withstanding such harsh heat for prolonged periods was unavailable until recently. Then with computer modeling, engineers had to come up with a spacecraft choreography to keep the heat down as much as possible during the one year that Messenger circles Mercury, its seven scientific instruments collecting data.

That's an Earth year of study. A Mercury year lasts 88 days — Earth days, that is.

Mercury is an average 36 million miles from the sun, making for a fast elliptical loop and thus a fast year. Earth, by comparison, is 93 million miles from the sun and takes four times as long to circle it.

In this land of extremes, the surface temperature changes a radical 1,100 degrees from day to night, from 800 degrees to minus-300 degrees.

No wonder metal-heavy Mercury — a little bigger than Earth's moon, yet about as dense as Earth — is so bewitching.

Scientists want to know how the planet turned out the way it did, and whether the perpetually dark carters at the poles hold ice. Anything scientists can learn about how Mercury formed will shed light on the origins of the other inner rocky planets of the solar system: Venus, Earth and Mars, each one so very different.

Once its mission is accomplished in 2012, Messenger will keep orbiting Mercury until it eventually crashes onto the surface. It will go down with a pair of U.S. flags, decals solemnly placed on one of Messenger's most heat-resistant surfaces.

The spacecraft team wanted to leave a flag on Mercury to show, for all time, that Americans were there.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mercury; messenger; nasa; planetmercury; spacecraft

1 posted on 07/25/2004 7:06:41 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

They could beat the heat problem if they launched at night.

I will never understand why NASA didn't hire me as a project engineer.


2 posted on 07/25/2004 7:15:40 PM PDT by Lokibob (All typos and spelling errors are mine and copyrighted!!!!)
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To: LibWhacker
The spacecraft team wanted to leave a flag on Mercury to show, for all time, that Americans were there.

Spacecraft team rocks!

3 posted on 07/25/2004 7:17:56 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: Lokibob

LOL, I'm tellin' 'ya . . . NASA needs people like you!


5 posted on 07/25/2004 7:20:05 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

Did you ever try to discuss anything about the space program with a liberal democrat woman who is totally uninformed, unaware, uneducated???? They look at you with a blank stare on their face and say something profound like "I know I should know what you are talking about, but I don't follow they news, and I'm sorry, but I don't have any idea what you are talking about."

Like the space craft we sent to Mars, or Saturn. They pay no attention to things like that. They just don't pay attention to anything but nail polish, clothes, and hair styles.

I am a woman, too, but staying informed is IMPORTANT.


6 posted on 07/25/2004 7:20:55 PM PDT by buffyt (The Clinton administration didn't care about national security-only about covering up their mistakes)
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To: Vince Ferrer

Sheila Jackson Lee, congresscritter from NASA area of Houston, really did ask if our US flag is still on Mars where we left it.... The moon, Sheila, the mooooon! and that is where we should send HER!


7 posted on 07/25/2004 7:22:03 PM PDT by buffyt (The Clinton administration didn't care about national security-only about covering up their mistakes)
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To: Vince Ferrer

Yup . . . That's one of the things that told me I had to post this article. 'Course, the world is gonna hate us even more now. They just can't stand America being number one at anything.


8 posted on 07/25/2004 7:22:14 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: outlaw3

When they say $50 million is spent on a space program, that doesn't mean $50 million is shot into space. It means $50 million was spent on earth, for salarys, rocket parts and research and development. A waitress in Houston directly benefits from the space program, just as sure as the rocket plant.

The space program has made this country great.


9 posted on 07/25/2004 7:23:48 PM PDT by Lokibob (All typos and spelling errors are mine and copyrighted!!!!)
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To: buffyt
Yep, and liberal "men" are just as bad, worried as they are about what was on Queer Eye for a Straight Guy last night, lol. They usually say we should take care of problems on Earth before we go into space -- meaning spend more on welfare and other bottomless pits. Pretty pathetic! Just guessing, but I think space exploration, etc., may turn out to be the most important thing man has ever done. Time will tell.
10 posted on 07/25/2004 7:30:11 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: buffyt
Keep up, keep in touch, stay informed, it's happening right here on FR. It's better than TV, radio, and newspapers put together since you can sound off, ask questions and get answers, although sometimes my dog posts under my screen name and says really dumb things and misspells, etc., so JD's answers aren't necessarily the best. That's my dog--JD.
11 posted on 07/25/2004 7:31:22 PM PDT by RightWhale (Withdraw from the 1967 UN Outer Space Treaty and establish property rights)
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To: LibWhacker

I wish Clinton would be a passenger on that rocket. It would help in melt away his fat.


12 posted on 07/25/2004 7:32:41 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative (Do not remove this tag under penalty of law.)
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To: LibWhacker
In other newz, Rep. Barney Frank volunteered to explore Uranus. And hisanus...
13 posted on 07/25/2004 8:51:54 PM PDT by Captainpaintball (2+2=the terrorists WANT the Democrats to win in November!!!)
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To: Lokibob
They could beat the heat problem if they launched at night. I will never understand why NASA didn't hire me as a project engineer.

Because your solution is wrong. It is not the launch date that is critical but the arrival date!

14 posted on 07/25/2004 8:55:00 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: Paleo Conservative

Let's let Sen. Glenn have a third shot into space. He could take Dan Rather with him!


15 posted on 07/25/2004 9:51:06 PM PDT by eccentric (aka baldwidow)
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