7 Mercury
7 Mercury
7 Mercury
Mercury Facts
Mean distance from Sun:
Length of Year:
88 days
Rotation period:
58.65 days
Inclination of axis:
Average temperature:
Diameter:
Magnetic field
weak
Historical
Mercury is one of the five planets known to the
ancients. They called these planets "wandering stars".
Mercury may be seen as an evening "star" near where
the sun has set, or as a morning "star" near where the
sun will rise.
The ancient Greeks called the evening star Hermes and
the morning star Apollo, believing them to be different
objects.
The planet is named for Mercury, the Roman
messenger of the gods.
Transit of Mercury
Visible from
Earth about
every 8 years.
Image of May 7, 2003 Mercury Transit was taken by NASA/ESA's SOHO (Solar & Heliospheric Observatory)
Transit of Mercury on
November 8,2006. Sunspot
#923, which is just below the
equator at the left-hand side, is
much bigger than Mercury is.
Two more sunspots at the righthand side at the equator.
Mercury appears as a small
black dot in the lower middle of
the solar disk.
Mariner 10
3 Flybys 1974-1975
Mariner 10 was the seventh successful
launch in the Mariner spacecraft series, and
the first to use the gravitational pull of one
planet (Venus) to reach another (Mercury).
Incoming View of
Mercury
This photomosaic of
Mercury was
constructed from
photos taken by
Mariner 10 six hours
before the spacecraft
flew past the planet on
March 29, 1974. These
images were taken
from a distance of
5,380,000 kilometers
(3,340,000 miles).
Close
Encounter
This two-image
mosaic of Mercury
was constructed
from photos taken
by Mariner a few
hours before the
spacecraft's
closest and first
encounter with the
planet on March
29, 1974.
Outgoing View
of Mercury
This mosaic of
Mercury was created
from more than 140
images taken by the
Mariner 10
spacecraft on March
29, 1974. The
images were
acquired after the
spacecraft exited
Mercury's shadow.
Mercurys Atmosphere
Like the Earths Moon, Mercury has a very volatile atmosphere. What
little atmosphere exists is made up of atoms or ions blasted off its
surface by the solar wind and has less than a million-billionths the
pressure of Earth's atmosphere at sea level. It is composed chiefly of
oxygen, sodium, and helium.
Mercury's extreme surface temperature enhances the escape of these
volatile atoms into space.
With no atmosphere or hydrosphere, there has been no erosion from
wind or water.
Mercury may have water ice at its north and south poles. The ice exists
inside deep craters. The floors of these craters remain in perpetual
shadow, so the Sun cannot melt the ice.
Meteorites do not burn up due to friction as they do in other planetary
atmospheres.
Mercurys Surface
Highly cratered with smooth
terrains.
Relatively ancient, volcanic
surface.
Similar to Earths Moon, but
fewer craters and more
plains.
Geologically longer active
than Moon?
Plains mostly lava or impact
ejecta?
Caloris Basin
Largest structure on
Mercury ~1300 km
Asteroid-size impactor
early in solar system
history
Basin contains smooth
plains but is highly
ridged and fractured.
Discovery Rupes
Sinuous feature may be a
thrust fault.
This feature and many
similar ones on Mercury
suggest compressional
forces and 1-2 km radial
shrinkage planet-wide.
200 km
Cooling, contraction od
Mercury at end of
volcanically active early
history?
Mercurys Interior
Mercurys density is
similar to Earths, but
planet is only ~1/3 the
size of Earth.
Large iron core, 75% of
radius (~1850 km),
Silicate mantle only ~550
km thick.
Principal Investigator:
Project Management:
Instruments:
Structure:
Propulsion:
GenCorp Aerojet
Navigation:
August 3, 2004
Launch Vehicle:
Delta II 7925H
2006, 2007
March 2011
Figure 2. MESSENGER mission timeline featuring major trajectory adjustments (DSM dates may change)
Science Payload
Capturing Mercury
through MESSENGER's
Dual Cameras
BepiColumbo
ESA-ISAS Mission to
Mercury
Planned launch ~2014,
1 Lander and 2 Orbiters