NASA’s InSight Lander Captures Meteoroid Impacts on Mars

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This particular impact occurred on September 5, 2021, and the audio contains three notable moments. First, the meteoroid enters the atmosphere, then it breaks into at least three pieces, and finally impacts the surface. The sound of the event is less of an apocalyptic crash and more of a cartoonish bubble popping—a “bloop,” in NASA’s terminology. NASA said this bloop occurs due to an atmospheric effect where the low-pitched sounds arrive at InSight before the higher-pitched sounds.

NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter then confirmed the locations of the craters from this impact during a flyover. The orbiter used its High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera to take a picture of the three impact craters—though it’s possible that several more craters exist, they are likely too small to be captured by HiRISE. Additional impacts captured by InSight occurred on May 27, 2020, February 18, 2021, and August 31, 2021.

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The seismic data generated from these impacts helps InSight continue to study the internal geologic structure of Mars. Since seismic waves move through different mediums at different speeds, InSight can help scientists paint an accurate picture of the evolution and current configuration Mars’ internal layers. The meteoroid impacts are an exciting new piece of data for InSight, which has detected over 1,300 marsquakes so far, according NASA—especially since the dust-covered lander is likely to end its mission on Mars later this year due to loss of power.

Hazes imitator • foto's van andré hazes imitator rené van beeten •. If a thing’s worth doing, it’s worth doing badly — but only if you’re supposed to do it in the first place…. اكثر جهاز مبيعاً في السوق البريطاني لشهر فبراير 2021.