September 5, 2024

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Spacecraft flies closer to Mercury than planned after thruster glitch

A 2021 image of Mercury taken by the BepiColombo mission, which has again flown past the Sun-scorched planet.
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A 2021 image of Mercury taken by the BepiColombo mission, which has again flown past the Sun-scorched planet.

A spacecraft carrying European and Japanese probes passed closer to Mercury than originally planned overnight after thruster problems delayed the mission to study the little-known, sun-scorched planet.

The BepiColombo launched in 2018 on a winding path that had been intended to enter the orbit of the planet closest to the sun in December 2025.

But in April, a glitch with the spacecraft's thrusters sapped some of its power supply, forcing teams on the ground to change its trajectory and delaying its arrival until November 2026.

The new path meant the spacecraft needed to fly 35 kilometers (22 miles) closer to the planet than initially planned—passing just 165 kilometers above the surface—during its latest flyby.

The European Space Agency's operations team confirmed that "all went well" with the flyby overnight, the mission's account on X said on Thursday.

It also posted a new image taken by the probe of the planet, whose pockmarked surface resembles the moon.

It was the fourth of six planned flybys of Mercury on the mission's nine-billion-kilometer journey before it can finally settle into the planet's orbit.

Most of the time Mercury is closer to Earth than Mars—but the red planet can be reached by missions from Earth in just seven months.

Mercury is "the most difficult" planet for probes to reach, explained Paris Observatory astronomer Alain Doressoundiram.

The planet's relatively tiny mass—it is only slightly bigger than the moon—means its is extremely weak compared to the sun, making it tricky for satellites to stay in its orbit.

"It takes much more energy to brake and stop at Mercury than to go to Mars," Doressoundiram told AFP.

This is where delicate maneuvers called gravitational assists come in. These slingshots around celestial bodies allow spacecraft to speed up, slow down, or change trajectory.

The glitch with the electric thrusters means the spacecraft is now operating with only 90 percent of its planned .

The blasted surface of Mercury in an image taken by NASA's MESSENGER probe in 2008.
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The blasted surface of Mercury in an image taken by NASA's MESSENGER probe in 2008.

After months spent investigating the problem, the thrusters will "remain operating below the minimum thrust required for an insertion into orbit around Mercury in December 2025," mission manager Santa Martinez said in a statement earlier this week.

The new slower path means BepiColombo is now planned to enter in November 2026.

Space 'oddities'

Mercury is by far the least studied of the four rocky, innermost planets in our solar system, which also include Venus, Earth and Mars.

NASA's Mariner 10 was the first probe to capture a close picture of its lunar-looking surface in 1974.

No spacecraft had orbited the planet until the MESSENGER probe arrived in 2011.

The NASA mission confirmed "some rather bizarre things," said Doressoundiram, a specialist on the surfaces of planets.

One of these "oddities" is that Mercury is the only rocky planet other than Earth to have a magnetic field, Doressoundiram said. Exactly how it has such a so close to the sun is not fully understood.

Another "oddity" is that Mercury's iron core composes 60 percent of its mass—compared to only a third for Earth.

Mercury's surface is also marked by "hollows," which could suggest relatively recent geologic activity.

Also unclear is the composition of minerals on covering the planet's , which is blasted with intense radiation from the sun.

These are just some of the mysteries that the BepiColombo mission hopes to shed light on when it finally orbits Mercury for at least a year and a half.

The carries two separate satellites, one from the ESA and another from Japan's JAXA space agency, which have a total of 16 scientific instruments.

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