• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

InSight Captures The Strange Sound Of Space Rocks Smashing Into Mars

September 20, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

NASA’s InSight Martian lander has added meteorite impacts to the activity it has detected on Mars, having previously detected quakes thought to be caused by the cooling of the Martian interior and volcanic building. Although the space rocks landing nearby have been small, InSight is so sensitive it picked up the seismic waves from collisions as much as 290 kilometers (180 miles) away, and now NASA has released the sound of meteorites hitting Mars. 

The Earth’s atmosphere experiences a regular bombardment of items ranging from the size of sand grains up to great boulders. These can make for spectacular displays in the sky, but only the larger ones hit the ground rather than burning up on the way down. The much thinner atmosphere on Mars lets far more objects through. Knowing this is happening, however, and actually detecting it, are different things. Despite decades of Martian landers and rovers, none of them had felt the seismic waves caused by a space rock hitting the planet.

Advertisement

InSight has been on Mars since 2018, but the first time scientists noticed seismic waves from an impact was after an event on September 5, 2021, now reported in a new paper. It was worth the wait, however. Even the thin Martian atmosphere created enough friction to cause the meteoroid to explode. NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter detected not one, but three darkened spots produced by pieces of the object after it broke up.

“It was super exciting,” Dr Ingrid Daubar of Brown University said in a statement. “My favorite images are the ones of the craters themselves. After three years of waiting for an impact, those craters looked beautiful.”

Three images that show crater impacts on Mars, with the displaced regolith from the impact in blue to show how it traveled

Three further meteoroid impacts were detected by the seismometer on NASA’s InSight lander and captured by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Image credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona

Having determined InSight is capable of detecting the seismic waves from meteorite impacts, Daubar and co-authors looked further. Upon re-examining InSight’s previous data they found three smaller events from 2020 and earlier in 2021. Each created seismic waves smaller than a magnitude 2.0 Marsquake. 

Advertisement

In three cases, InSight also picked up the acoustic wave from the object’s passage through the atmosphere. Presumably coincidentally, one detection was only five days before the impact that first caught their attention.

The craters are of more than aesthetic interest to planetary scientists. “Having a really precise location for the source of the impacts calibrates all other data for the mission,” Daubar said. “This validates the estimates we’ve made” for the location and size of the impacts. It will also allow scientists working with InSight’s data to locate future collisions more precisely.

Daubar and colleagues were surprised impacting space rocks hadn’t been detected before. Being closer to the asteroid belt than Earth, Mars should encounter more such objects, allowing for its smaller size. Previous Mars landers may not have been sensitive enough to record such collisions, but InSight has already detected 1,300 Marsquakes, despite the fact the Red Planet is less seismically active than our own.

Advertisement

The authors suspect InSight has in fact picked up the seismic waves from other meteorite strikes before, but that these were misinterpreted because the team didn’t recognize the distinctive shape of such waves. Now, with four confirmed events as yardsticks, they hope to find more.



Measuring the frequency of crater-forming events allows us to calculate the age of the Martian landscape, telling us how long craters like this last before being buried by sand or other processes. “Impacts are the clocks of the Solar System,” said the study’s lead author Dr Raphael Garcia of Institut Supérieur de l’Aéronautique et de l’Espace in France.

Ironically, the InSight/Reconnaissance Orbiter collaboration is actually beating all our abundant Earthly seismic devices and satellites. Only one crater on Earth’s formation has been matched to equivalent seismic disturbances and infrasound detections from the meteorite’s passage through the atmosphere. The seismic network installed by Apollo astronauts has picked up the vibrations from many impacts, but none have been matched to newly formed craters.

Advertisement

The study was published in Nature Geoscience.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. With a little help from their friends: how The Sims 4’s community has helped shape the game
  2. Exclusive: WHO-backed vaccine hub for Africa to copy Moderna COVID-19 shot
  3. TikTok’s lead EU regulator opens two data privacy probes
  4. Never released John Lennon recording sold for $58,300 at Danish auction

Source Link: InSight Captures The Strange Sound Of Space Rocks Smashing Into Mars

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Ötzi The Iceman’s Ribcage Wasn’t Like Ours, But It May Have Helped Him Survive
  • Molecular “Protocells” May Form On Titan Even At More Than 100 Degrees Below Zero
  • The Blanket Octopus Has The Most Extreme Sexual Dimorphism In The Animal Kingdom
  • Brunhes-Matuyama Reversal: Listen The Earth’s Magnetic Fields Flip 780,000 Years In The Past
  • Long-Period Radio Transient Signals Puzzle Astronomers – One That’s Speeding Up May Be The Strangest Yet
  • Mariner 4: 60 Years Ago Today, NASA Changed How We Study The Solar System
  • Odd Flashes Of Light Have Been Seen On The Moon For Centuries – Some May Still Defy Explanation
  • Impact That Made Meteor Crater May Have Triggered Giant Grand Canyon Landslide
  • Get Ready, Skywatchers: A “Dazzling” Total Lunar Eclipse Is Coming In 2025
  • How A Man Won The Lottery 14 Times Using Unbelievably Basic Math
  • What Are The Amazon’s “Flying Rivers”? And Why Every Single One Of Us Relies On Them
  • Curious New Microbe With Tiny Genome Toes The Line Between Cell And Virus
  • We’ve Just Found Out Where The World’s Longest-Living Vertebrate Has Its Babies
  • For The First Time, An Animal Has Been Shown Responding To Plant-Produced Sounds
  • Deep Ocean Currents Have “Weather” And Seasonal Changes That We’re Only Just Learning About
  • Stratus: What Are The Symptoms Of The Latest COVID-19 Subvariant To Spread Around The World?
  • In 1927, Henry Ford Tried To Build A Town In The Amazon And Things Went Very, Very Badly
  • Human Botfly: Say Hello To The Parasite That Would Love To Get Under Your Skin
  • Is The Weather Making Your Headache Worse?
  • “Zoning Out” Actually Helps You Learn? Data From Up To 90,000 Brain Cells Says So
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version