Three years of Marsquake measurements by Peter Ruegg Zurich, Switzerland (SPX) Jun 10, 2022
The InSight mission on Mars is running out of power and most of its functions could be shut down in the months to come. Some have already been deactivated. However, the attached seismometer, SEIS, will remain in operation for as long as possible. ETH Professor Domenico Giardini takes stock of three years of marsquake measurements. NASA's InSight lander successfully touched down on Mars on 26 November 2018. Seventy Martian days later, the seismometer - called SEIS - deployed on the surface of Mars began recording the Red Planet's tremors. It has registered more than 1,300 quakes so far. These seismic recordings have enabled the researchers to describe the interior structure of Mars more accurately than ever before. But now the mission threatens to come to an end: the solar panels are supplying too little power because they're covered in dust. ETH Professor Domenico Giardini, who worked with a team of ETH Zurich researchers and engineers to develop the control electronics for SEIS and is responsible for the marsquake service, explains why, despite these circumstances, he's not all that pessimistic.
ETH News: NASA is expecting to shut down the seismometer by the end of the summer and the lander around the end of the year as the power supply is no longer sufficient. What is your assessment of this situation? Domenico Giardini: As we expected, the energy supply deteriorated further in March and April due to the duststorm season. That's when a lot of dust accumulates on the lander's solar panels, diminishing the power supply. But there are also whirlwinds that occasionally clear the dust. So we are hoping we still have a bit more time.
And are those sorts of gusts sufficient to clean the panels?
How long will the power last?
Despite the imminent end, how, in your opinion, has the mission gone so far?
Is NASA satisfied too?
What didn't go as well as hoped?
What does that mean for the analysis? In mid-May, there was a big surprise - and just in time: NASA announced that SEIS had measured a magnitude 5 quake on Mars for the first time. Have you been able to do something with that? We were eagerly waiting for such an event. After several events of magnitude 4, finally a magnitude 5! This quake also came at the right time. We now understand much more about the seismicity and the interior structure after three years of analyses and can do a lot of new things with the data. It will flow into our further analysis. We are only just at the start of studying waves that travel on the surface of Mars, because such waves are emitted only by large events. In the case of this new event, we observed powerful surface waves travelling several times around Mars, which provided us with an invaluable tool via which to explore the structure of the crust. All the teams are now working flat out! What is the probability of further large quakes occurring and being recorded in the time that is left? The magnitude is important, but the combination of magnitude and distance is even more important. For our research, we look for special waves that travel across the core or surface before returning to the planet's surface. Such waves are even rare on Earth, and on Mars we have seen only a handful. Any new large event can provide us with more information.
So there's not enough data?
Would it help, theoretically, to place additional seismometers on Mars?
What's next for Mars research at ETH after InSight? You will be retiring soon. How do you motivate yourself to launch projects that you may never get to see the conclusion of? I will be a professor at ETH Zurich until 2028, but such major space missions like these are multigenerational projects. All scientists should want to advance even things whose outcome they may not live to see.
So you have no doubt that these kinds of lifetime investments are appropriate?
Mars is all shook up Perth, Australia (SPX) Jun 06, 2022 Recently, 47 new 'marsquakes' (that is, quakes on Mars) have been detected by Professor Hrvoje Tkalcic from the Australian National University and Professor Weijia Sun from the Chinese Academy of Science. The discovery suggests Mars to be more seismically active than previously thought. The findings also provide clues about the composition of Mars and how other rocky planets in our Solar System formed billions of years ago. b>I Feel The Mars Move Under My Feet br> /b> First of all, if you' ... read more
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