Posted on 01/26/2018 8:47:31 PM PST by BenLurkin
May 2018 is the launch window for NASAs next mission to Mars, the InSight Lander. InSight is the next member of what could be called a fleet of human vehicles destined for Mars. But rather than working on the question of Martian habitability or suitability for life, InSight will try to understand the deeper structure of Mars.
InSight stands for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport. InSight will be the first robotic explorer to visit Mars and study the red planets deep interior. The work InSight does should answer questions about the formation of Mars, and those answers may apply to the history of the other rocky planets in the Solar System. The lander, (InSight is not a rover) will also measure meteorite impacts and tectonic activity happening on Mars currently.
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InSight was conceived as part of NASAs Discovery Program, which are missions focused on important questions all related to the content, origin, and evolution of the solar system and the potential for life elsewhere, according to NASA. Understanding how our Solar System and its planets formed is a key part of the Discovery Program, and is the question InSight was built to answer.
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InSight will be launched to Mars from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California by an Atlas V-401 rocket. The trip to Mars will take about 6 months. Once on the Martian surface, InSights mission will have a duration of about 728 Earth days, or just over 1 Martian year.
... The Atlas that launches the lander will also launch another NASA technology experiment. MarCO, or Mars Cube One, is two suitcase-size CubeSats that will travel to Mars behind InSight. Once in orbit around Mars, their job is to relay InSight data as the lander enters the Martian atmosphere and lands.
(Excerpt) Read more at universetoday.com ...
“The work InSight does should answer questions about the formation of Mars”
Yep, it will contact Mars Jeopardy for the answers.
InSight will be looking for Martian ruins buried under the flood debris since the planet was destroyed by its encounters with Venus.
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