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Mars Space NASA

Probe From NASA's InSight Lander Burrows Into the Soil of Mars (space.com) 83

"The 'mole' aboard NASA's InSight Mars lander has encountered stiff resistance on its first subsurface sojourn beneath the surface of the Red Planet," reports Space.com: In a major mission milestone, InSight's Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (HP3) instrument burrowed underground for the first time on Feb. 28. After 400 hammer blows over the course of four hours, the instrument apparently got between 7 inches and 19.7 inches (18 to 50 centimeters) beneath the red dirt -- but obstacles slowed its progress, mission team members said...

The $850 million InSight lander -- whose name is short for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport -- touched down on Nov. 26. The spacecraft aims to map the Red Planet's interior in unprecedented detail. It will do this primarily by characterizing "marsquakes" and other vibrations with a suite of supersensitive seismometers, which was built by a consortium led by the French space agency CNES; and measuring subsurface heat flow with HP3, which DLR provided.

"I'm digging Mars!" announced NASA's official Twitter feed for the InSight robotic lander, adding "My self-hammering mole has started burrowing in, and my team is poring over the data..."
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Probe From NASA's InSight Lander Burrows Into the Soil of Mars

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  • I guess we can rule out the possibility that sandworms really exist.
  • Anthropomorphism (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ve3oat ( 884827 ) on Monday March 04, 2019 @10:27AM (#58212568) Homepage
    "I'm digging Mars." God, I hate it when NASA and other science organizations anthropomorphize everything. It is very unscientific and can give less educated people (most of them voters) the wrong idea about how nature really works. As in, "the virus mutated in order to spread more easily". (I can't find the exact quote now, but you know what I mean.)

    So I guess the Insight lander has a personality and a whole PR team to relay its hopes and feelings to its fans and the interested public. If I ask, maybe it will send me an autographed picture. I wonder if Insight writes in block letters or cursive.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by sbaker ( 47485 )

      Yes - this first-person stuff is just really annoying. "My science team..." urgh. The probe doesn't "own" those people - it's the other way around. "I'm working a menial job to provide low level data for a team of brilliant research scientists" would be better. But really? No. Let's no anthropomorphize this stuff - it's beyond annoying. If/when we get true AI, then the computer can speak in the first person...otherwise...hell no.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      I hate it when NASA and other science organizations anthropomorphize everything. It is very unscientific...

      To be fair, the press cherry-picks quotes to publish such that if you say 99 things in a careful and accurate way but 1 thing in anthropomorphized or over-simplified way, that one is more likely to be quoted because it's more relatable to readers and/or more "catchy". The first job of a reporter/editor is to sell readership quantity, not accuracy. That's life under a market-driven press.

      The only solut

    • Relax. It's just a cutesy way of having InSight "speak for itself" to the media. If NASA used the standard protocol of having press conferences beamed from JPL, they would run the risk that somebody might be wearing some shirt that triggers liberals. ESA is not going to make that mistake again.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      I find its cute and harmless.
      Also a quick search on Google Scholar lead me to a paper supporting anthropomorphising in education for biology so at least, the idea is not totally unscientific.

  • its first subsurface sojourn beneath the surface of the Red Planet

    Good thing you clarified that. Otherwise we might have thought it was the other kind of subsurface sojourn - the one that happens twenty feet up in the air.

  • "between 18 to 50 centimeters"

    Wow, those depth sensors must have cost a fortune.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      "between 18 to 50 centimeters"

      Wow, those depth sensors must have cost a fortune.

      Somewhere between $18 and $50 million.

  • by Shotgun ( 30919 ) on Monday March 04, 2019 @11:59AM (#58213052)

    Sheesh! Less than two feet in four hours. I told you they should have sent Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck.

  • "but obstacles slowed its progress...On its way into the depths, the mole seems to have hit a stone, tilted about 15 degrees and pushed it aside or passed it...The mole then worked its way up against another stone at an advanced depth..."

    Mars soil is full of rocks, gee, who would've guessed? What if it hits a rock too big to move? That gizmo may not be strong enough to break through or get around.

    Then again, that's what exploration is all about: you don't know what's down there until you actually go. Failu

  • Is there a reason NASA chose to use hammer blows to dig down rather than a drill or borer? Did it have to do with the amount of energy required to drill compared to hammering?

    It would seem a long, slow drilling process would be more beneficial to making a hole than continually pounding into the ground.

    • The hammering process is probably less likely to jam when it encounters rocks.

    • The so-called "mole" is an impact pile driver. A small mass is moved up inside the "mole" to gain potential energy by compressing against a spring. After releasing the mass, the potential energy is converted to kinetic energy due to acceleration by the spring. Upon impact with the inside of the base of the "mole", the kinetic energy is converted into work done (force x distance) by a change in momentum (force x time = mass x velocity (before impact) - mass x velocity (after impact)) which causes the "mole"

What is wanted is not the will to believe, but the will to find out, which is the exact opposite. -- Bertrand Russell, "Skeptical Essays", 1928

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