LAUREL, Md. —


For the first time in 33 years, a space probe




flew by the planet Mercury with cameras blazing




Jan. 13 while eager scientists looked on from Earth.

NASA’s Messenger spacecraft successfully flew past its target planet at 2:04:39 p.m. EST




as applause filled its mission control room here at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.

“It went right according to script, so that was very comforting,”




Sean Solomon, Messenger principal investigator at




the Carnegie Institution of Washington, said




after the flyby.

Messenger – short for Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry




and Ranging – skimmed just




200 kilometers




over the surface of its target planet during the first of three planned flybys to guide the spacecraft toward an eventual orbit around the small rocky world on March 18, 2011.

Not since NASA’s Mariner 10 probe, which flew past Mercury three times between 1974 and 1975, has a spacecraft taken such a close look at the planet. Researchers hope Messenger’s $446 million mission will answer long-standing questions about Mercury’s oddly high density, magnetic field and thin atmosphere, as well as shed new light on how planets formed during the solar system’s infancy.

“To understand the excitement of the scientists, you have to think of this as the first Super Bowl in 30 years,” said Marilyn Lindstrom, NASA’s Messenger program scientist, before the flyby. “We’ve been waiting to go back to Mercury that long.”

Mariner 10, for example, only mapped about 45 percent of Mercury’s surface during its three flybys. Messenger turned its cameras and other instruments on half of the planet’s uncharted surface during its Jan. 13




flyby and will ultimately spend an entire year in orbit around the planet.

“The real question is, ‘Does it all look the same?’”




said Rob Gold, Messenger’s science payload manager at the Applied Physics Laboratory. “We just don’t know.”



By the next day,




Messenger began




beaming more than 1,200 new images of Mercury back to Earth along with other data




.





Mark Robinson, a science team member from the University of Arizona, said he is looking forward to Messenger’s views of the Caloris Basin, a large impact crater that Mariner 10 only saw half of during its flight.

“They are imaging, basically, the largest single unexplored piece of real estate in the inner solar system,” Alan Stern, associate administrator for NASA’s science mission directorate, told reporters Jan. 14




.

A vital sunshade, just one example of advances in technology between the Mariner 10 and Messenger missions, allows the new probe to keep its sophisticated instruments at about room temperature while the sun-facing side reaches a scorching




315 degrees Celsius




.

“It’s like taking a 2008 Jaguar and comparing it to a six-year-old’s toy bike,” Stern said of the improvements since Mariner 10.

Mission scientists said they




already are planning Messenger’s next Mercury flyby, set for October, and expect the spacecraft to finish relaying all of the imagery and other data from the Jan. 13




rendezvous by Jan. 22.



“I will be just simply ch




amping at the bit to see data that comes down,” said Faith Vilas, a Messenger participating scientist and director of the MMT Observatory in Mt. Hopkins, Ariz.

Messenger was expected to swing by Mercury at a speed of about




25,749 kilometers per hour




and use the planet’s gravitational pull to slow down by about




8,046 kilometers per hour




. It has completed just over half of its




7.9 billion-kilometer




flight to orbit Mercury.





The Jan. 13 flyby marked the fourth planetary pass for Messenger, which has swung past Earth once and Venus twice since its August 2004 launch. The success of those previous flybys gave mission controllers vital experience for




its Jan. 13 rendezvous, mission researchers said.

“They made it look easy,” Solomon said.