Posted on 04/23/2019 9:16:37 PM PDT by amorphous
Scientists just felt the Red Planet move under their feet robotically from millions of miles away, on the stark surface of Mars.
On April 6, NASA's InSight lander sensed its first confirmed marsquake, a phenomenon scientists suspected, but couldn't confirm, occurred on the neighboring planet. Measuring the Martian equivalent of earthquakes, seismic waves traveling through the interior of the planet, was among the lander's key science goals.
"We've been waiting months for our first marsquake," Philippe Lognonné, the principal investigator for the seismometer instrument, said in a statement released by the French space agency, which runs the instrument with the national research center. "It's so exciting to finally have proof that Mars is still seismically active."
(Excerpt) Read more at space.com ...
Mars has gas! Mars has gas! Send TUMS immediately.
“That’s no planet. It’s a space station!”
An impact signature, say an incoming asteroid, would be a sudden spike, of maximum magnitude, that tapers off?
Can seismic activity be studied with a single seismometer?
https://www.seis-insight.eu/en/public-2/martian-science/seismic-activity
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