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The NASA InSight spacecraft launches onboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas-V rocket on May 5, 2018, from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. NASA on May 5 launched its latest Mars lander, called InSight, designed to perch on the surface and listen for "Marsquakes" ahead of eventual human missions to explore the Red Planet. Image Credit: AFP

Vandenberg Air Force Base (United States): Nasa on Saturday launched its latest Mars lander, called InSight, designed to perch on the surface and listen for “Marsquakes” ahead of eventual human missions to explore the Red Planet.

“Three, two, one, liftoff!” said a Nasa commentator as the spacecraft blasted off on a dark, foggy morning atop an Atlas V rocket at 4.05am Pacific time (1105 GMT) from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, marking Nasa’s first interplanetary launch from the US west coast.

The $993 million (Dh3.6 billion) project aims to expand our knowledge of interior conditions on Mars, inform efforts to send human explorers there, and reveal how rocky planets like the Earth formed billions of years ago.

If all goes as planned during the 485 million-kilometre journey, the lander should settle on the Red Planet on November 26.

The InSight lander, seen here in a NASA handout illustration, is designed to monitor quakes on the surface of Mars. — AFP

InSight is short for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport.

“#Mars, here I come! Six months and counting to the Red Planet,” said a message on InSight’s Twitter account.

Nasa chief scientist Jim Green said experts already know that Mars has quakes, avalanches and meteor strikes.

“But how quake-prone is Mars? That is fundamental information that we need to know as humans that explore Mars,” Green said.

 

French-made seismometer

The key instrument on board is a seismometer, called the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure, made by the French Space Agency.

After the lander settles on the Martian surface, a robotic arm is supposed to emerge and place the seismometer directly on the ground.

“For us, InSight is perhaps not the ultimate but a very, very important mission because we are going to the hear the heartbeat of Mars with the seismometer we put on board,” said Jean-Yves Le Gall, president of France’s Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales (CNES), in an interview on Nasa television after liftoff.

The second main instrument is a self-hammering probe that will monitor heat in the planet’s subsurface.

Called the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package, it was made by the German Space Agency with the participation of the Polish Space Agency.

The probe will bore down three to five metres below the surface, Nasa said, 15 times deeper than any previous Mars mission.

Understanding the temperature on Mars is crucial to Nasa’s efforts to send people there by the 2030’s, and how much a human habitat might need to be heated under frigid conditions, said Green.

The temperature at the landing site for InSight is frigid, and expected to range between 100 Celsius to -20 Celsius.

Daytime summer temperatures near the Martian equator may reach 20C, but then plunge by night to -73C.

“It is an important part of knowledge of how this planet is evolving,” Green said.

“We have to be able as humans living and working on Mars to survive that.”

 

Two Earth years

The solar and battery-powered lander is designed to operate for 26 Earth months, or one year on Mars, a period in which it is expected to pick up as many as 100 quakes.

“Hopefully it will last a lot longer than that,” said Tom Hoffman, InSight project manager from Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The spacecraft was initially supposed to launch in 2016 but had to be delayed after temperature tests showed a problem with part of the seismometer, which engineers have since fixed.

InSight aims to be the first Nasa spacecraft to land on Mars since the Curiosity rover in 2012.

“There is nothing routine about going to Mars, especially landing on Mars,” said Stu Spath, InSight program manager at Lockheed Martin Space.