InSight

InSight Lander.
Illustration af Insight i arbejde på Mars.

Insight, stiliseret som InSight, er en Marssonde fremstillet i 2010'erne, som oprindeligt var planlagt at skulle opsendes i marts 2016. Navnet er et akronym for Interior Exploration med Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport. På grund af en fejl på instrumentet SEIS (Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure), som ikke kunne repareres inden den planlagte opsendelse, meddelte NASA i december 2015, at opsendelsen var blevet udskudt. I marts 2016 planlagdes opsendelsen til at ske inden den 5. maj 2018[1]

Insights mål er at placere en stationær sonde udrustet med en seismograf og varmeoverførelsessonde på Mars overflade for at studere planetens tidlige geologiske udvikling. Dette skulle kunne give en ny forståelse af solsystemets planeter – Merkur, Venus, Jorden, Mars – og Månen. Ved at genbruge teknik fra Mars Phoenix Lander, som var landet på Mars i 2008, forventedes omkostningerne og risici ved projektet at blive mindskede[2]

På grund af problemerne med det vigtigste videnskabelige instrument SEIS blev InSight-rumsonden sendt tilbage til Lockheed Martins fabrik i Colorado. NASA besluttede i marts 2016 at bruge skønsmæssigt 150 millioner US-dollar på at vente med opsendelsen af InSight til maj 2018[3]. Opsendelsen skete den 5. maj 2018 klokken 11:05 GMT, og sonden landede på Mars den 26. november 2018.[4].

Referencer

Medier brugt på denne side

Mars Viking 22e169.png

Original Caption Released with NASA Image:

Photo from Viking Lander 2 shows late-winter frost on the ground on Mars around the lander. The view is southeast over the top of Lander 2, and shows patches of frost around dark rocks. The surface is reddish-brown; the dark rocks vary in size from 10 centimeters (four inches) to 76 centimeters (30 inches) in diameter. This picture was obtained September 25, 1977. The frost deposits were detected for the first time 12 Martian days (sols) earlier in a black-and-white image. Color differences between the white frost and the reddish soil confirm that we are observing frost. The Lander Imaging Team is trying to determine if frost deposits routinely form due to cold night temperatures, then disappear during the warmer daytime. Preliminary analysis, however, indicates the frost was on the ground for some time and is disappearing over many days. That suggests to scientists that the frost is not frozen carbon dioxide (dry ice) but is more likely a carbon dioxide clathrate (six parts water to one part carbon dioxide). Detailed studies of the frost formation and disappearance, in conjunction with temperature measurements from the lander’s meteorology experiment, should be able to confirm or deny that hypothesis, scientists say.
InsSight spacecraft appendix gallery Image 55-full.jpg
Spacecraft InSight on Mars (artist's view)
InSight spacecraft model.png
A transparent image of the InSight lander.