Europe, Japan ready spacecraft for 7-year journey to Mercury | Inquirer Technology

Europe, Japan ready spacecraft for 7-year journey to Mercury

/ 07:15 PM October 19, 2018

This image obtained from NASA shows the Goethe Basin in Mercury’s North Pole. The image was one of the first sent back to Earth by the MESSENGER spacecraft. For more than three decades, scientists have thought volcanoes may have helped craft Mercury’s smooth northern plains but they have learned much more since NASA’s MESSENGER probe — which stands for MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging began orbiting the planet. Between 3.5 and four billion years ago, volcanic cracks opened in the crust and gushed lava, forming plains across six percent of the tiny hot planet, covering an area as big as 60 percent of the United States, said the study. AFP PHOTO / NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington”

BERLIN — Final preparations were underway Friday for the launch of a joint mission by European and Japanese space agencies to send twin probes to Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun.

An Ariane 5 rocket is scheduled to lift the BepiColombo spacecraft into orbit from French Guiana late Friday, after which it will begin its seven-year journey to the solar system’s innermost planet.

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The European Space Agency said the 1.3 billion-euro ($1.5 billion) BepiColombo mission is one of the most challenging in its history. Mercury’s extreme temperatures, the intense gravity pull of the Sun and blistering solar radiation make for hellish conditions.

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The spacecraft will have to follow an elliptical path that involves a fly-by of Earth, two of Venus and six of Mercury itself so it can slow down sufficiently before arriving at its destination in December 2025.

Newly developed electrical ion thrusters will help nudge the spacecraft, which is named after Italian scientist Giuseppe ‘Bepi’ Colombo, into the right orbit.

When it arrives, BepiColombo will release two probes — Bepi and Mio — that will independently investigate the surface and magnetic field of Mercury. The probes are equipped with special insulation to cope with temperatures varying from 430 degrees Celsius (806 Fahrenheit) on the side facing the Sun, and -180 degrees Celsius (-292 Fahrenheit) in Mercury’s shadow.

Scientists hope to build on the insights gained by NASA’s Messenger probe, which ended its mission in 2015 after a four-year orbit of Mercury. The first spacecraft to visit Mercury was NASA’s Mariner 10 that flew past the planet in the mid-1970s.

Mercury, which is only slightly larger than Earth’s moon, has a massive iron core about which little is known. Researchers are also hoping to learn more about the formation of the solar system from the data gathered by the BepiColombo mission.

It is the second recent cooperation between the Europeans and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

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JAXA’s Hayabusa2 probe dropped a German-French rover on the asteroid Ryugu earlier this month.  /kga

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TOPICS: Europe, Hayabusa2, International news, Japan, JAXA, Mercury, NASA, News, Planet, Science, Space, Spacecraft, technology, World, World News
TAGS: Europe, Hayabusa2, International news, Japan, JAXA, Mercury, NASA, News, Planet, Science, Space, Spacecraft, technology, World, World News

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