Planetary News: Mercury (2009)
MESSENGER Rewrites Mercury Textbooks Even Before Entering Orbit
By Emily Lakdawalla
November 5, 2009
Mercury in color
MESSENGER obtained this color view of a crescent Mercury on approach to its third flyby, on September 29, 2009.
Credit: NASA / JHUAPL / CIW
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As MESSENGER zoomed toward Mercury for its third flyby, it
was commanded to rotate in a maneuver that would help it test a surprising
result from the second flyby. Just after that rotation maneuver began,
there was a "hiccup," in the words of principal investigator Sean
Solomon; the spacecraft computer detected something unexpected in the power
system, and halted the acquisition of science data. But in the minutes
before the shutdown of science systems, MESSENGER gathered just enough data
to prove that Mercury's surface is unexpectedly rich in iron and titanium,
a finding that will force planetary geologists to rewrite their stories about
the formation of the innermost planet.
The data haul from the flyby, though only half the amount that had been planned,
included the images necessary to fill the largest remaining gap in MESSENGER's
global map of the planet. Those images included the "most spectacular" volcanic
vent feature yet seen on the planet, as well as evidence for geologic activity
on Mercury as recently as a billion years ago. "After Mariner 10,
it was thought that internal volcanic activity on Mercury ended earlier than
on any other planet," MESSENGER imaging team member Brett Denevi said. "Now
we're realizing that's not the case."
Not Iron Poor After All
Mercury has long presented a conundrum to planetary scientists, MESSENGER
participating scientist David Lawrence explained in a press briefing Tuesday. Mercury
is known to have the largest metallic core, relative to its diameter, of any
of the rocky planets. But, Lawrence said, "many space and Earth
based measurements have shown Mercury's surface has a low concentration of
iron within silicate minerals. Since silicate minerals typically dominate
the bulk composition of planetary bodies, this observation has led to a commonly-held
view that Mercury's surface has generally low abundances of iron as well as
titanium. As a consequence, it has been a puzzle for studies of Mercury
to explain how a planet can have such a large, iron-rich core but have a surface
with such a very low iron content."
The dearth of iron-bearing silicate minerals on Mercury is documented using
infrared spectroscopy. Before MESSENGER's flybys, there had been no
direct test of the elemental composition (as opposed to the mineral composition)
of Mercury's surface. As MESSENGER flew past Mercury, it pointed its
neutron spectrometer at the surface, providing the first direct test of the
exact abundance of iron and titanium in Mercury's rocks.
Lawrence explained how the measurement works. "Traveling throughout
the galaxy are particles called galactic cosmic rays, which are very high-velocity
protons. All objects in the solar system are constantly bombarded by
these cosmic rays. When the cosmic rays hit a planetary surface, the
atoms in that surface are blasted apart, producing high-energy neutrons that
bounce around [within] the surface and slow down, and then escape the surface. Neutrons
that have significantly slowed down from their initial high energy we call
'thermal neutrons.' It turns out that iron and titanium, these elements
that we're interested in measuring, are very efficient absorbers of thermal
neutrons. As a consequence, we can measure iron and titanium on Mercury's
surface by measuring these thermal neutrons, such that if you [detect] a large number
of thermal neutrons, this would indicate a low iron and titanium
content. Conversely, a low number of thermal neutrons would
indicate a high iron and titanium content." The neutron
spectrometer data from the first and third Mercury flybys are shown below.
MESSENGER Neutron Spectrometer data from flybys 1 and 3
During MESSENGER's closest approaches to Mercury on January 14, 2008 ("M1") and September 29, 2009 ("M3"), it used its Neutron Spectrometer to determine the abundance of the elements iron and titanium in the surface. Near closest approach on both of these flybys, the spacecraft was commanded to rotate in a way that would increase its sensitivity to the neutrons flowing off of the surface. On these two diagrams, black dots represent the neutron spectrometer data; bars above and below the dots are the measurement uncertainty. The blue, red, and green lines are the predicted neutron counts for surfaces containing low, high, and very high abundances of iron and titanium, respectively. MESSENGER counted unexpectedly low numbers of neutrons, indicating that the surface has much higher iron and titanium abundance than previously thought.
Credit: NASA / JHUAPL / CIW
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The low amount of neutrons is a perfect fit to models containing high iron
and titanium content, similar to that found in the dark basaltic rock of the
lunar maria. "It's significantly higher than previously appreciated. That's
a pretty exciting result for us," Lawrence said. But it's also "perplexing," because
the iron is known not to be in the usual location, silicate minerals. "The
iron is probably wrapped up in some other kind of mineral, like titanium oxide." Although
the results from MESSENGER's neutron spectrometer mean that planetary scientists
no longer have to evoke convoluted ad-hoc explanations for how Mercury could
have an enormous iron core while lacking iron in its crust, the puzzle has
just been replaced with a different one, as Solomon explained. "The
neutron spectrometer results have confirmed that the outer silicate shell
of Mercury had more iron than most of us appreciated, because that iron does
not appear in silicates. So we have an even greater challenge because
the iron is in a form that we don't normally encounter in other planetary
situations. It's going to be a volley back to our geochemists and our
petrologists to come up with a scenario that's going to be consistent with
our observations."
Mercury's Story Is Longer than We Thought
Bright and dark splashes on Mercury's surface
This image was created by applying a statistical technique to color data captured by MESSENGER's wide-angle camera to emphasize subtle variations in spectral properties. The bright splash at upper right identifies the location of a likely volcanic vent. At the center, an unnamed peak-ring impact basin makes a dark splotch. However, the center of the basin is similar in color to the volcanic plains outside it, indicating that the basin has been modified subsequent to its formation.
Credit: NASA / JHUAPL / CIW
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Volcanic vent on Mercury
MESSENGER saw this irregular, rimless depression on approach to its third flyby. The depression is approximately 30 km across and is surrounded by highly reflective material. Its features are distinctly different from those of impact craters, so it is suspected to be volcanic. The high-reflectance halo surrounding this enigmatic feature differs in color from the surrounding plains; it may represent a deposit of volcanic cinders more than 150 kilometers across.
Credit: NASA / JHUAPL / CIW
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Peak-ring impact basin on Mercury
This spectacular 290-km-diameter double-ring basin seen in detail for the first time during MESSENGER's third flyby of Mercury is remarkably well preserved and appears to have formed relatively recently, compared with most basins on Mercury. The low numbers of superposed impact craters and marked differences in color across the basin suggest that the smooth area within the innermost ring may be the site of some of the most recent volcanism on Mercury.
Credit: NASA / JHUAPL / CIW
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Those observations also include evidence that Mercury has been a volcanically
active place for much longer than previously imagined. This much had
been learned during the previous two flybys, but the terrain newly imaged
during the third flyby held two previously unseen outstanding examples of
that volcanic activity.
The first is a feature that had been previously seen as a bright splash on
Mercury's surface, but only at relatively low resolution. The high-resolution
photos snapped by MESSENGER on approach to this flyby make it clear that the
splash is a halo of material, probably volcanic cinders, tossed out of an
enormous, steep-sided hole in the ground that is almost certainly a volcanic
vent, Denevi said: "It doesn't have a raised rim, it is very steep,
and it has this odd shape, all of which are characteristics of a volcanic
vent. It's one of the best examples on the planet." At roughly
30 kilometers across, it is one of the largest such features yet spotted by
MESSENGER.
The other is a peak-ring basin, an impact crater large enough to have formed
a central ring complex in addition to its outer rim. (These basins are
more common on Mercury than on the Moon because of Mercury's higher gravity.) Seen
for the first time by MESSENGER, the 290-kilometer-diameter basin has no name,
but resembles another one discovered during MESSENGER's first flyby and now
named Raditladi. Raditladi and this basin are unusual for having extensional
faults within their inner basins; most of the faults visible on Mercury formed
not from extension but from contraction, as the entire planet contracted while
it cooled. But what is even more unusual about this basin is the dearth
of impact craters on the smooth inner basin floor, which formed some time
after the impact basin. Its relatively unmarked surface indicates that
it has not had much time exposed to space to accumulate impact craters, meaning
that it must be geologically young, perhaps about a billion years old. Since
Mercury has long been thought to have been inactive since 3.8 billion years
ago, such a relatively youthful age for a volcanic feature is surprising.
MESSENGER will not enter Mercury orbit until March 2011. Solomon noted
that just an hour before Tuesday's press briefing, the countdown clock to
orbit insertion ticked past the 500-day mark. But its three flybys have
provided plenty of data for scientists to chew on until then. "Studying
the planet is like reading a mystery novel by Dorothy Sayers or Agatha Christie," Solomon
concluded. "It's like we've read the first four chapters, where
Mariner 10 was the first chapter, and each of our flybys was another chapter. We've
gained important clues from each of those flybys, but we still have a long
way to go to understand the full plot."
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