Nasa InSight Mars landing: Everything you need to know as we touch down on red planet for first time in years
Space agency hasn't touched down on the Martian surface for years
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Your support makes all the difference.Nasa is about to touch down on Mars.
The space agency’s latest lander – known as InSight – will plunge through the Martian atmosphere and touch down on the Red Planet’s surface today.
It marks a major moment for Nasa, which hasn’t sent anything new to Mars for a full six years. The new lander will be an important addition to the space agency’s presence on the surface – which is diminished after the Opportunity rover stopped responding to mission control recently, leaving its engineers fearing it had died in a dust storm.
The InSight rover’s mission, from which it gets its name, is to offer an unprecedented insight not just at the Martian surface but what lies beneath. Using a variety of instruments, it will delve into the inside of the Mars surface, burying underneath.
As it does, it will send back information about what the planet looks like underneath that famous, dusty red surface. Scientists hope to learn about not only Mars itself but also about other rocky planets in our own solar system – including Earth.
The rover will land on the surface this evening, UK time. Nasa will livestream the proceedings, and they will be covered as they happen here on The Independent.
That descent is not guaranteed, and comes amid concern and upset about the future of the Opportunity rover. There have been numerous failed missions to Mars: from the European Space Agency’s Schiaparelli lander, which smashed into the surface in 2016 at such speed it could not have survived, all the way back to the original Soviet missions in the 1970s which repeatedly failed.
This time around, we’ll get to know if it’s successful straight away. That’s thanks to two little flying robots known as CubeSats – named WALL-E and EVE after the main characters in the 2008 animated film – which went to Mars on the same rocket that is carrying the new lander and will fly past the Red Planet, relaying messages about its progress to ground controllers nearly 100 million miles away.
Once the lander arrives on Mars, it will sit stationary and begin its work, looking deep underneath the surface for clues about what is going on there. Using seismometers to measure the movement of the ground, and a heat probe to take its temperature, scientists will get their first look at what is happening deep in Mars – and hopefully provide some clues about how it formed and more.
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