Clouds drift over the dome-covered seismometer, known as SEIS, belonging to NASA's InSight lander, on Mars. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Three papers published today share new details on the crust, mantle, and
molten core of the Red Planet.
Before NASA’s InSight spacecraft touched down on Mars in 2018, the rovers
and orbiters studying the Red Planet concentrated on its surface. The
stationary lander’s seismometer has changed that, revealing details about the
planet’s deep interior for the first time.
Three papers based on the seismometer’s data were published today in
Science, providing details on the depth and composition of Mars’ crust, mantle,
and core, including confirmation that the planet’s center is molten. Earth’s
outer core is molten, while its inner core is solid; scientists will continue
to use InSight’s data to determine whether the same holds true for Mars.
“When we first started putting together the concept of the mission more
than a decade ago, the information in these papers is what we hoped to get at
the end,” said InSight’s principal investigator Bruce Banerdt of NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, which leads the mission. “This
represents the culmination of all the work and worry over the past decade.”
InSight’s seismometer, called the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure
(SEIS), has recorded 733
distinct marsquakes. About 35 of those – all between magnitudes 3.0 and 4.0 –
provided the data for the three papers. The ultrasensitive seismometer enables
scientists to “hear” seismic events from hundreds to thousands of miles away.
NASA’s InSight lander detected a marsquake, represented here as a seismogram, on July 25, 2019, the 235th Martian day, or sol, of its mission. Seismologists study the wiggles in seismograms in order to confirm whether they’re really seeing a quake or noise caused by wind. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Peering Into Mars
Seismic waves vary in speed and shape when traveling through different
materials inside a planet. Those variations on Mars have given seismologists a
way to study the planet’s inner structure. In turn, what the scientists learn
about Mars can help improve the understanding of how all rocky planets –
including Earth – formed.
Like Earth, Mars heated up as it formed from the dust and larger clumps of
meteoritic material orbiting the Sun that helped to shape our early solar
system. Over the first tens of millions of years, the planet separated into
three distinct layers – the crust, mantle, and core – in a process called
differentiation. Part of InSight’s mission was to measure the depth, size, and
structure of these three layers.
Each of the papers in Science focuses on a different layer. The scientists
found the crust was thinner than expected and may have two or even three
sub-layers. It goes as deep as 12 miles (20 kilometers) if there are two
sub-layers, or 23 miles (37 kilometers) if there are three.
Beneath that is the mantle, which extends 969 miles (1,560 kilometers)
below the surface.
At the heart of Mars is the core, which has a radius of 1,137 miles (1,830
kilometers). Confirming the size of the molten core was especially exciting for
the team. “This study is a once-in-a-lifetime chance,” said Simon Stähler of
the Swiss research university ETH Zurich, lead author of the core paper. “It
took scientists hundreds of years to measure Earth’s core; after the Apollo
missions, it took them 40 years to measure the Moon’s core. InSight took just
two years to measure Mars’ core.”
Hunting for Wiggles
The earthquakes most people feel come from faults caused by tectonic plates
shifting. Unlike Earth, Mars has no tectonic plates; its crust is instead like
one giant plate. But faults, or rock fractures, still form in the Martian crust
due to stresses caused by the slight shrinking of the planet as it continues to
cool.
InSight scientists spend much of their time searching for bursts of
vibration in seismograms, where the tiniest wiggle on a line can represent a
quake or, for that matter, noise created by wind. If seismogram wiggles follow
certain known patterns (and if the wind is not gusting at the same time),
there’s a chance they could be a quake.
The initial wiggles are primary, or P, waves, which are followed by
secondary, or S, waves. These waves can also show up again later in the
seismogram after reflecting off layers inside the planet.
“What we’re looking for is an echo,” said Amir Khan of ETH Zurich, lead
author of the paper on the mantle. “We’re detecting a direct sound – the quake
– and then listening for an echo off a reflector deep underground.”
These echoes can even help scientists find changes within a single layer,
like the sub-layers within the crust.
“Layering within the crust is something we see all the time on Earth,” said
Brigitte Knapmeyer-Endrun of the University of Cologne, lead author on the
paper about the crust. “A seismogram’s wiggles can reveal properties like a
change in porosity or a more fractured layer.”
One surprise is that all of InSight’s most significant quakes appear to
have come from one area, Cerberus Fossae, a region volcanically
active enough that lava may have flowed there within the last few million years.
Orbiting spacecraft have spotted the tracks of boulders that may have rolled
down steep slopes after being shaken loose by marsquakes.
Curiously, no quakes have been detected from more prominent volcanic
regions, like Tharsis, home to three of the biggest volcanoes on Mars. But it’s
possible many quakes – including larger ones – are occurring that InSight can’t
detect. That’s because of shadow zones caused by the core refracting seismic
waves away from certain areas, preventing a quake’s echo from reaching InSight.
Waiting for the Big One
These results are only the beginning. Scientists now have hard data to
refine their models of Mars and its formation, and SEIS detects new marsquakes
every day. While InSight’s energy level is being managed, its seismometer is
still listening and scientists are hopeful they’ll detect a quake bigger than
4.0.
“We’d still love to see the big one,” said JPL’s Mark Panning, co-lead
author of the paper on the crust. “We have to do lots of careful processing to
pull the things we want from this data. Having a bigger event would make all of
this easier.”
Panning and other InSight scientists will share their findings at 9 a.m.
PDT (12 p.m. EDT) on July 23 in a livestreamed discussion on NASA Television, the NASA app, the agency’s website, and multiple agency
social media platforms, including the JPL YouTube and Facebook channels.
More About the Mission
JPL manages InSight for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. InSight is part
of NASA’s Discovery Program, managed by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight
Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Lockheed Martin Space in Denver built the
InSight spacecraft, including its cruise stage and lander, and supports
spacecraft operations for the mission.
A number of European partners, including France’s Centre National d’Études
Spatiales (CNES) and the German Aerospace Center (DLR), are supporting the InSight
mission. CNES provided the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure (SEIS)
instrument to NASA, with the principal investigator at IPGP (Institut de
Physique du Globe de Paris). Significant contributions for SEIS came from IPGP;
the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany; the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) in Switzerland; Imperial College
London and Oxford University in the United Kingdom; and JPL. DLR provided the
Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (HP3) instrument, with
significant contributions from the Space Research Center (CBK) of the Polish
Academy of Sciences and Astronika in Poland. Spain’s Centro de Astrobiología
(CAB) supplied the temperature and wind sensors.
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-s-insight-reveals-the-deep-interior-of-mars
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