Download
NASA Mars lander captures strikes by four incoming space rocks
Updated 16:19, 20-Sep-2022
CGTN
These craters were formed by a meteoroid impact on Mars, the first to be detected by NASA's InSight on September 5, 2021. The enhanced-color image highlights the dust and soil disturbed by the impact in blue in order to make details more visible to the human eye. /NASA

These craters were formed by a meteoroid impact on Mars, the first to be detected by NASA's InSight on September 5, 2021. The enhanced-color image highlights the dust and soil disturbed by the impact in blue in order to make details more visible to the human eye. /NASA

A NASA lander on Mars has captured the vibrations and sounds of four meteoroids striking the planet's surface.

Scientists reported Monday that Mars InSight detected seismic and acoustic waves from a series of impacts in 2020 and 2021. A satellite orbiting the red planet confirmed the impact locations, as far as 290 kilometers from the lander.

Scientists are delighted by the detections – a first for another planet.

The first confirmed meteoroid exploded into at least three pieces, each leaving its own crater. An 11-second audio snippet of this strike includes three "bloops," as NASA calls them, one of sounding like metal flapping loudly in the wind here on Earth.

"After three years of InSight waiting to detect an impact, those craters looked beautiful," Brown University's Ingrid Daubar, a co-author of the research paper in the journal Nature Geoscience, said in a statement.

The InSight team expected to pick up numerous meteoroid strikes, given Mars' proximity to the asteroid belt and the planet's thin atmosphere, which tends to keep entering space rocks from burning up. But the lander's French-built seismometer may have missed impacts because of interfering noise from the Martian wind or seasonal changes in the atmosphere. Now scientists know what to look for, according to NASA, likely resulting in a surge of detections.

"Impacts are the clocks of the solar system," French lead author Raphael Garcia said in a statement from the Higher Institute of Aeronautics and Space in Toulouse. "We need to know the impact rate today to estimate the age of different surfaces."

Launched in 2018, InSight has already detected more than 1,300 mars quakes. The largest measured a magnitude-5 earlier this year. By comparison, the mars quakes generated by the meteoroid impacts registered no more than magnitude 2.

Source(s): AP

Search Trends