RoundupReads UPDATE: Insight Lands Successfully on Mars

UPDATE: Insight Lands Successfully on Mars

2018-11-26

UPDATE

Insight has landed successfully on Mars.

Mission controllers at NASA-JPL have received a signal from NASA’s InSight lander on the Mars surface via MarCO OR a beep from InSight’s X-band radio. In the coming hours, engineers will be checking on the spacecraft’s health. 

Previous:

At approximately 2 p.m. CT on Nov. 26, NASA's InSight spacecraft will blaze through the Martian atmosphere and attempt to set a lander gently on the surface of the Red Planet in less time than it takes to hard-boil an egg. 

Starting at 1 p.m., there will be live landing commentary of the landing taking place on NASA TV.

Launched on May 5, InSight marks NASA's first Mars landing since the Curiosity rover in 2012. The landing will kick off a two-year mission in which InSight will become the first spacecraft to study Mars' deep interior. Its data also will help scientists understand the formation of all rocky worlds, including our own.

InSight is being followed to Mars by two mini-spacecraft comprising NASA’s Mars Cube One (MarCO), the first deep-space mission for CubeSats. If MarCO makes its planned Mars flyby, it will attempt to relay data from InSight as it enters the planet’s atmosphere and lands.

The following is a list of expected milestones for the spacecraft, assuming all proceeds exactly as planned and engineers make no final changes the morning of landing day. Some milestones will be known quickly only if the experimental Mars Cube One (MarCO) spacecraft are providing a reliable communications relay from InSight back to Earth. The primary communications path for InSight engineering data during the landing process is through NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Odyssey. Those data are expected to become available several hours after landing.

If all goes well, MarCO may take a few seconds to receive and format the data before sending it back to Earth at the speed of light. The one-way time for a signal to reach Earth from Mars is eight minutes and seven seconds. Times listed below are in Earth Receive Time, or the time JPL Mission Control may receive the signals relating to these activities (all times EST)

  • 1:40 p.m.  — Separation from the cruise stage that carried the mission to Mars
  • 1:41 p.m.  — Turn to orient the spacecraft properly for atmospheric entry
  • 1:47 p.m.  — Atmospheric entry at about 12,300 mph (19,800 kph), beginning the entry, descent and landing phase
  • 1:49 p.m.  — Peak heating of the protective heat shield reaches about 2,700°F (about 1,500°C)
  • 15 seconds later — Peak deceleration, with the intense heating causing possible temporary dropouts in radio signals
  • 1:51 p.m.  — Parachute deployment
  • 15 seconds later — Separation from the heat shield
  • 10 seconds later — Deployment of the lander's three legs
  • 1:52 p.m.  — Activation of the radar that will sense the distance to the ground
  • 1:53 p.m.  — First acquisition of the radar signal
  • 20 seconds later — Separation from the back shell and parachute
  • 0.5 second later — The retrorockets, or descent engines, begin firing
  • 2.5 seconds later — Start of the "gravity turn" to get the lander into the proper orientation for landing
  • 22 seconds later — InSight begins slowing to a constant velocity (from 17 mph to a constant 5 mph, or from 27 kph to 8 kph) for its soft landing
  • 1:54 p.m.  — Expected touchdown on the surface of Mars
  • 2:01 p.m.  — "Beep" from InSight's X-band radio directly back to Earth, indicating InSight is alive and functioning on the surface of Mars
  • No earlier than 2:04 p.m., but possibly the next day — First image from InSight on the surface of Mars
  • No earlier than 7:35 p.m. — Confirmation from InSight via NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter that InSight's solar arrays have deployed
This illustration shows a simulated view of NASA's InSight lander descending on its parachute toward the surface of Mars. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
The InSight spacecraft approaches Mars in this artist's concept. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
This illustration shows a simulated view of NASA's Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport (InSight) lander firing retrorockets to slow down as it descends toward the surface of Mars. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASA’s InSight Lander has returned its first picture from Mars via the MarCO CubeSat mission. A post-landing news is briefing expected at 2 p.m. PST (5 p.m. EST).