A National Aeronautics Space Administration planetary exploration mission came to a planned, but
nonetheless dramatic, end Thursday when it slammed into Mercury’s
surface at about 8,750 mph and created a new crater on the planet’s
surface.
Mission controllers at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, have confirmed NASA’s MErcury
Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER)
spacecraft impacted the surface of Mercury, as anticipated, at 3:26 p.m.
EDT.
Mission control confirmed end of operations just a few minutes later,
at 3:40 p.m., when no signal was detected by NASA’s Deep Space Network
(DSN) station in Goldstone, California, at the time the spacecraft would
have emerged from behind the planet. This conclusion was independently
confirmed by the DSN’s Radio Science team, which also was monitoring for
a signal from MESSENGER.
“Going out with a bang as it impacts the surface of Mercury, we are
celebrating MESSENGER as more than a successful mission,” said John
Grunsfeld, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission
Directorate in Washington. “The MESSENGER mission will continue to
provide scientists with a bonanza of new results as we begin the next
phase of this mission--analyzing the exciting data already in the
archives, and unravelling the mysteries of Mercury.”
Prior to impact, MESSENGER’s mission design team predicted the
spacecraft would pass a few miles over a lava-filled basin on the planet
before striking the surface and creating a crater estimated to be as
wide as 50 feet.
MESSENGER’s lonely demise on the small, scorched planet closest to
the sun went unobserved because the probe hit the side of the planet
facing away from Earth, so ground-based telescopes were not able to
capture the moment of impact. Space-based telescopes also were unable to
view the impact, as Mercury’s proximity to the sun would damage optics.
MESSENGER’s last day of real-time flight operations began at 11:15
a.m., with initiation of the final delivery of data and images from
Mercury via a 230-foot (70-meter) DSN antenna located in Madrid, Spain.
After a planned transition to a 111-foot (34-meter) DSN antenna in
California, at 2:40 p.m., mission operators later confirmed the switch
to a beacon-only communication signal at 3:04 p.m.
The mood in the Mission Operations Center at APL was both somber and
celebratory as team members watched MESSENGER’s telemetry drop out for
the last time, after more than four years and 4,105 orbits around
Mercury.
“We monitored MESSENGER’s beacon signal for about 20 additional
minutes,” said mission operations manager Andy Calloway of APL. “It was
strange to think during that time MESSENGER had already impacted, but we
could not confirm it immediately due to the vast distance across space
between Mercury and Earth.”
MESSENGER was launched on Aug. 3, 2004, and began orbiting Mercury on
March 17, 2011. Although it completed its primary science objectives by
March 2012, the spacecraft’s mission was extended two times, allowing
it to capture images and information about the planet in unprecedented
detail.
During a final extension of the mission in March, referred to as XM2,
the team began a hover campaign that allowed the spacecraft to operate
within a narrow band of altitudes from five to 35 kilometers from the
planet’s surface.
On Tuesday, the team successfully executed the last of seven daring
orbit correction maneuvers that kept MESSENGER aloft long enough for the
spacecraft’s instruments to collect critical information on Mercury’s
crustal magnetic anomalies and ice-filled polar craters, among other
features. After running out of fuel, and with no way to increase its
altitude, MESSENGER was finally unable to resist the sun’s gravitational
pull on its orbit.
“Today we bid a fond farewell to one of the most resilient and
accomplished spacecraft to ever explore our neighboring planets,” said
Sean Solomon, MESSENGER’s principal investigator and director of
Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, New
York. “A resourceful and committed team of engineers, mission
operators, scientists, and managers can be extremely proud that the
MESSENGER mission has surpassed all expectations and delivered a
stunningly long list of discoveries that have changed our views--not
only of one of Earth’s sibling planets, but of the entire inner solar
system.”
Among its many accomplishments, the MESSENGER mission determined
Mercury’s surface composition, revealed its geological history,
discovered its internal magnetic field is offset from the planet’s
center, and verified its polar deposits are dominantly water ice.
APL built and operated the MESSENGER spacecraft and managed the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
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