DocumentCode
990441
Title
Messenger Arrives at Mercury [NEWS]
Author
Digregorio, Barry
Volume
44
Issue
12
fYear
2007
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
16
Abstract
In the first of several encounters, Messenger (Mercury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging) is scheduled to fly by Mercury on 14 January 2008 at a little more than 25 000 kilometers per hour, coming within 200 km of the planet´s surface. Because it must perform scientific observations and relay them to Earth while in the scorching glare of Mercury´s tight solar orbit, the craft boasts a multilayer sunshade and the most advanced communications systems ever deployed in an interplanetary mission. To protect Messenger´s wiring, electronics, and scientific instruments from the heat of being within 46 million km of the sun, it has a highly reflective and heat-resistant 5-square-meter micrometeorite-proof sunshade. Messenger also has a series of radiators and pipes to divert heat from the spacecraft body. The data the craft gathers could be put to work solving problems here on Earth. Messenger will not observe the sun directly, but by examining the effects of the solar wind on Mercury´s magnetic field, scientists can make inferences about how solar storms cause radio interference, electricity grid disruptions, and other problems on Earth.
Keywords
Mercury (planet); planetary magnetism; solar wind; space vehicles; AD 2008 01 14; Earth; Mercury Surface Space Environment Geochemistry and Ranging; Mercury magnetic field; Messenger; electricity grid disruptions; electronics; heat-resistant 5-square-meter micrometeorite-proof sunshade; interplanetary mission; pipes; radiators; radio interference; scientific instruments; solar orbit; solar storms; solar wind; wiring; Aerospace electronics; Earth; Instruments; Mercury (planets); Nonhomogeneous media; Protection; Protective relaying; Space heating; Sun; Wiring;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.2007.4390015
Filename
4390015
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