Mysterious ‘Earth-Like’ Rumblings Inside Mars Detected by NASA Lander Trigger Flurry of Theories

The $850 million robotic geophysicist InSight lander touched down on Mars in November 2018 on a mission designed to help scientists better understand the interior of the Red Planet, as its seismometer was to feel for seismic waves, or ‘marsquakes’.

NASA’s Insight lander on Mars has detected intriguing rumblings emanating from the interior of the Red Planet, prompting scientists to suggest a flurry of theories explaining the seismic events.

The seismometer of the stationary probe designed to study the interior of the Red Planet detected the two new “marsquakes” on 7 March and 18 March, both in a region called Cerberus Fossae where two previous similar rumblings were observed by the mission. This would seem to suggest that the area is particularly seismically active.

Interestingly, the new quakes appear to match the earlier registered ones “geophysically”.

“Over the course of the mission, we’ve seen two different types of marsquakes: one that is more ‘moon-like’ and the other, more ‘Earth-like,'” Taichi Kawamura, a seismologist at France’s Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, said in a statement, adding:

After several months of preparation since touching down on Mars in November 2018 the mission has identified over 500 so-called “marsquakes” in its first Martian year, which lasts about 687 Earth days.

​Strong winds have thrown a spanner into the works of late, preventing scientists from homing in on small rumbles in the Red Planet. Now that things seem to have brightened up, a favourable spell of weather in March allowed mission personnel to detected two quakes stronger than magnitude 3.0.

NASA scientists are now focused on determining what may be causing the rumblings.

One suggestion is that it is a sudden release of energy from the planet’s interior, but if that is the case, the nature of that release remains unknown. As they puzzle over the matter, scientists are looking to improve marsquake observations during the next Mars year.

Mars ‘Winter’ Poses Challenges

The probe’s seismometer, called the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure (SEIS), is a sensitive instrument that is covered by a dome-shaped shield to block it from wind and prevent it from freezing.

However, even with the worst of the dust-storm season over, winds can cause enough vibration to obscure the seismic signals scientist are trying to detect. Furthermore, temperature fluctuations between day and night on Mars may be creating “popping sounds and spikes” in the seismometer’s data, according to the NASA team.

This is NASA InSight’s first selfie on Mars. It displays the lander’s solar panels and deck. On top of the deck are its science instruments, weather sensor booms and UHF antenna. The selfie was taken on Dec. 6, 2018

They are currently trying to insulate the sensitive cable connecting the instrument to the main lander by using the lander’s robotic arm to scoop Martian soil onto the cable.

​The ultimate goal of the next phase of the mission, which has been extended by two years to December 2022, is to bury the seismic tether completely.

Another challenge has been the dust residue from the storms that has shrouded the lander’s solar panels, which power it.

​Furthermore, the Red Planet is drifting away from the sun along its elliptical orbit, reducing power production.

Winter temperatures threaten the robot’s electronics, prompting the mission team to consider briefly putting InSight into hibernation mode later this spring.

As the orbit of Mars begins to carry it back toward the Sun in July, the power shortage strain on InSight’s systems should be alleviated.

InSight Lander is a stationary probe designed to study the interior of the Red Planet, unlike NASA’s Perseverance, a car-sized Mars rover designed to explore the crater Jezero , or Opportunity, Spirit and Curiosity rovers.

InSight was launched toward Mars on 5 May 2018 from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, on an Atlas V vehicle from United Launch Alliance.

​The mission landed successfully on 26 November 2018 at the Martian Elysium Planitia, an equatorial zone just south of an ancient volcanic area. Originally slated to send back data about the Red Planet’s interior for about 1 Mars year, (a little more than two Earth years), NASA’s InSight mission was extended through December 2022.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

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