SAN FRANCISCO — NASA’s MESSENGER spacecraft slammed into the surface of Mercury April 30, bringing a groundbreaking mission to a dramatic end.
The $450 million MESSENGER probe crashed at 3:26 p.m. EDT, gouging a new crater into Mercury’s heavily pockmarked surface. This violent demise was inevitable for MESSENGER, which had been orbiting Mercury since March 2011 and had run out of fuel.
The 3-meter-wide spacecraft was traveling about 14,080 kilometers per hour at the time of impact, and it likely created a smoking hole in the ground about 16 meters wide in Mercury’s northern terrain, NASA officials said. No instruments witnessed the crash, which occurred on the opposite side of Mercury from Earth.
MESSENGER was the first spacecraft to orbit the solar system’s innermost planet, and its observations over the last four years helped lift the veil on mysterious Mercury, mission team members said.
“Although Mercury is one of Earth’s nearest planetary neighbors, astonishingly little was known when we set out,” MESSENGER principal investigator Sean Solomon, director of Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, said in a statement.
“MESSENGER has at last brought Mercury up to the level of understanding of its sister planets in the inner solar system,” Solomon added. “Of course, the more we learn, the more new questions we can ask, and there are ample reasons to return to Mercury with new missions.”
Confirmation of MESSENGER’s death came at 3:40 p.m. EDT, when NASA’s Deep Space Network station in Goldstone, California, was unable to detect a signal from the spacecraft, NASA officials said.
Bringing Mercury into focus
The $450 million MESSENGER spacecraft, whose name is short for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry and Ranging, launched Aug. 3, 2004.
The probe took a long and looping trip through the inner solar system, relying on flybys of Earth, Venus and Mercury to slow down enough to be captured by Mercury’s gravity.
MESSENGER finally arrived at Mercury March 17, 2011, becoming the first probe ever to orbit the heat-blasted world, and just the second spacecraft ever to study it up close.
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MESSENGER’s original mission at Mercury was supposed to last just one year, but NASA extended operations twice so the probe could continue its observations, which team members say have revolutionized our understanding of the planet.
For example, MESSENGER mapped the planet in unprecedented detail, discovered that Mercury hosts a strangely offset magnetic field and confirmed that permanently shadowed craters near Mercury’s poles harbor deposits of water ice.
During the course of its four years at Mercury, MESSENGER captured more than 250,000 images and used its seven scientific instruments to gather extensive data sets that will keep scientists busy for years to come, NASA officials said.
The mission also leaves a technological legacy that could help future spacecraft work in harsh environments, officials added. For instance, MESSENGER’s ceramic-cloth sunshade effectively protected the probe’s instruments against powerful solar radiation.
MESSENGER blazed a trail that another spacecraft will be following soon: The joint European-Japanese BepiColombo mission is scheduled to launch in 2017 and arrive in orbit around Mercury in 2024.
BepiColombo consists of two different orbiters. One of them will study Mercury’s surface and internal composition, and the other will focus on the planet’s magnetosphere.
During the course of its work, BepiColombo may identify and investigate MESSENGER’s grave, in an attempt to better understand how space weather affects Mercury’s surface, Solomon said.
The BepiColombo team “will be looking for signs of [MESSENGER’s] crater, and if they can make measurements of it, they will know precisely how long that region has been exposed to space,” Solomon said during a news briefing earlier this month. “That will be an important study that comes a decade from now.”