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Initial results from the InSight mission on Mars

Authors :
Banerdt, W. Bruce
Smrekar, Suzanne E.
Banfield, Don
Giardini, Domenico
Golombek, Matthew
Johnson, Catherine L.
Lognonné, Philippe
Spiga, Aymeric
Spohn, Tilman
Perrin, Clément
Stähler, Simon C.
Antonangeli, Daniele
Asmar, Sami
Beghein, Caroline
Bowles, Neil
Bozdag, Ebru
Chi, Peter
Christensen, Ulrich
Clinton, John
Collins, Gareth S.
Daubar, Ingrid
Dehant, Véronique
Drilleau, Mélanie
Fillingim, Matthew
Folkner, William
Garcia, Raphaël F.
Garvin, Jim
Grant, John
Grott, Matthias
Grygorczuk, Jerzy
Hudson, Troy
Irving, Jessica C. E.
Kargl, Günter
Kawamura, Taichi
Kedar, Sharon
King, Scott
Knapmeyer-Endrun, Brigitte
Knapmeyer, Martin
Lemmon, Mark
Lorenz, Ralph
Maki, Justin N.
Margerin, Ludovic
McLennan, Scott M.
Michaut, Chloe
Mimoun, David
Mittelholz, Anna
Mocquet, Antoine
Morgan, Paul
Mueller, Nils T.
Murdoch, Naomi
Nagihara, Seiichi
Newman, Claire
Nimmo, Francis
Panning, Mark
Pike, W. Thomas
Plesa, Ana-Catalina
Rodriguez, Sébastien
Rodriguez-Manfredi, Jose Antonio
Russell, Christopher T.
Schmerr, Nicholas
Siegler, Matt
Stanley, Sabine
Stutzmann, Eléanore
Teanby, Nicholas
Tromp, Jeroen
van Driel, Martin
Warner, Nicholas
Weber, Renee
Wieczorek, Mark
Source :
Nature Geoscience; March 2020, Vol. 13 Issue: 3 p183-189, 7p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

NASA’s InSight (Interior exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) mission landed in Elysium Planitia on Mars on 26 November 2018. It aims to determine the interior structure, composition and thermal state of Mars, as well as constrain present-day seismicity and impact cratering rates. Such information is key to understanding the differentiation and subsequent thermal evolution of Mars, and thus the forces that shape the planet’s surface geology and volatile processes. Here we report an overview of the first ten months of geophysical observations by InSight. As of 30 September 2019, 174 seismic events have been recorded by the lander’s seismometer, including over 20 events of moment magnitude Mw= 3–4. The detections thus far are consistent with tectonic origins, with no impact-induced seismicity yet observed, and indicate a seismically active planet. An assessment of these detections suggests that the frequency of global seismic events below approximately Mw= 3 is similar to that of terrestrial intraplate seismic activity, but there are fewer larger quakes; no quakes exceeding Mw= 4 have been observed. The lander’s other instruments—two cameras, atmospheric pressure, temperature and wind sensors, a magnetometer and a radiometer—have yielded much more than the intended supporting data for seismometer noise characterization: magnetic field measurements indicate a local magnetic field that is ten-times stronger than orbital estimates and meteorological measurements reveal a more dynamic atmosphere than expected, hosting baroclinic and gravity waves and convective vortices. With the mission due to last for an entire Martian year or longer, these results will be built on by further measurements by the InSight lander.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17520894 and 17520908
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature Geoscience
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs52508819
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-020-0544-y