The Hot Rock

  • Even though Mercury is about 75% the diameter of Mars, it has about the same gravity

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    A Roundabout Route
    Launch — Aug. 2004
    Earth — flyby
    Venus — flybys
    Mercury — flybys
    Arrival — March 2011

    MESSENGER isn't due to enter Mercury's orbit until March 2011. But the probe will be busy all along the way, getting a gravity boost from Earth next year, then Venus twice in an ever tightening spiral toward the first planet from the sun

    WE DON'T KNOW THE HALF OF IT
    This picture of Mercury is a mosaic of 500 frames taken by Mariner 10, which saw only half the planet up close during its three flybys. The Hubble Space Telescope has not dared to snap some pictures of its own (training its gaze so close to the sun could fry its electronics) MESSENGER will need just 12 hours to complete an orbit of Mercury. With the planet spinning slowly below, it should be able to survey the entire surface within six months

    THE MESSENGER PROBE
    A nimble little spacecraft, MESSENGER weighs just 2,400 lbs. (1,100 kg), 55% of which is fuel. It carries a dual camera system and six other scientific instruments, all of which operate on solar power-something of which there is no shortage so close to the sun. A sunshade made of ceramic cloth keeps the hardware running at a balmy room temperature

    --Energetic particle and plasma spectrometers Will measure charged particles in Mercury's magnetosphere

    --Magnetometer Will map Mercury's magnetic field

    --X-ray, gamma-ray and neutron spectrometers Will detect types of elements on Mercury's surface and within its crust

    --Laser altimeter Will map Mercury's terrain

    --Dual imaging system Wide-and narrow-angle cameras

    --Atmospheric and surface composition spectrometer Will detect and measure atmosphere and surface composition

    --Insulating blanket

    --Sunshade

    --Star trackers

    --Propellant tank (1 of 3)

    --Solar panel (back)

    Sources: NASA; JPL; Mark Robinson, Northwestern University Center for Planetary Sciences; Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab TIME

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