InSight successfully lands on Mars

Updated 3:40 p.m. Eastern with Bridenstine statement.

PASADENA, Calif. — NASA’s InSight spacecraft successfully landed on Mars Nov. 26, completing a journey of nearly 500 million kilometers and starting a mission to study the planet’s interior.

The Lockheed Martin-built spacecraft touched down on Elysium Planitia near the Martian equator at 2:54 p.m. Eastern. Telemetry from the lander, relayed by a pair of cubesats called Mars Cube One (MarCO) passing by the planet, confirmed that the lander had made it safely to the surface. It transmitted an X-band “beep” seven minutes after touchdown, as planned, confirming it was operating.

“Flawless,” Rob Manning, chief engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a veteran of previous Mars landing missions, said in NASA TV commentary shortly after the landing.

“Today, we successfully landed on Mars for the eighth time in human history,” said NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine in an agency statement shortly after landing. “InSight will study the interior of Mars, and will teach us valuable science as we prepare to send astronauts to the Moon and later to Mars. This accomplishment represents the ingenuity of America and our international partners and it serves as a testament to the dedication and perseverance of our team. The best of NASA is yet to come, and it is coming soon.”

InSight celebration
InSight team members at mission control at JPL celebrate the successful landing of the spacecraft. Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls

With the landing, InSight will begin a prime mission scheduled to last two years to study the composition and structure of the planet’s interior. The spacecraft is equipped with two instruments, a seismometer and a heat flow probe, to carry out those measurements.

However, it will be several months before InSight starts collecting data from those instruments because of the time required to identify the best locations around the lander to place the instruments, and then to install them in those locations.

“Once we get to the surface, InSight is a slow-motion mission,” Bruce Banerdt, principal investigator for InSight at JPL, said at a briefing Nov. 25. “We take our time getting our instruments down. It’ll probably take at least two, probably more like three months, maybe even longer to get our instruments down. It’s going to us take a month or so to get them all calibrated.”

He said it would take nearly the full primary mission to get answers, depending on how many “marsquakes” the seismometer is able to measure. “The more marsquakes, the better,” he said. “The more shaking it does, the better we can see the inside.”

InSight first image
The first image from the InSight spacecraft, received minutes after landing and taken through a dust-speckled cover, shows relatively flat terrain around the landing site, as expected. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Problems with the seismometer, provided by the French space agency CNES, caused InSight to miss its original launch window in March 2016. The instrument was redesigned and completed in time to allow InSight to lift off on an Atlas 5 from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California May 5.

InSight has an unusual degree of reliance on international partners for a NASA science mission. In addition to the seismometer, the heat flow probe was provided by the German space agency DLR. Those international contributions accounted for about $180 million of the mission’s overall cost, including launch and operations, of nearly $1 billion.

“It is unique in terms of just how much is being done elsewhere,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA associate administrator for science, Nov. 25. “We believe in the United States that leadership and collaboration are not contradicting values.”

For Banerdt, the mission is an opportunity to realize a long-held dream of measuring seismic activity on Mars. Prior to the landing, he recalled being at JPL, as a graduate student, for the landings of the NASA’s twin Viking spacecraft in 1976. Those landers also carried seismometers, but didn’t provide useful data.

He “got the mission bug” in the late 1980s to do a Mars mission to measure seismic activity there. “I’ve really been working pretty steadily for 25 to 30 years on this,” he said. “I’m a patient person, as well as persistent.”