Thursday, September 19, 2024

Magnetic mystery at Mercury revealed by BepiColombo probe (video)

AstronomyMagnetic mystery at Mercury revealed by BepiColombo probe (video)


When the BepiColombo Mercury probe made its closest approach yet to its target earlier this month, the spacecraft not only captured the first clear view of the planet’s south pole but also collected valuable science data that underscores just how sharply and rapidly its local environment changes in response to the solar wind.

On Sept. 4, BepiColombo conducted its fourth successful swing past Mercury, in a flyby that reduced the European-Japanese probe’s speed and altered its direction, taking it a step closer to entering orbit around the planet in 2026. A preliminary analysis of data collected by 10 of the spacecraft’s 16 instruments shows that the environment around Mercury varies significantly with occasionally unexpected features, mission team members said last week at the Europlanet Science Congress in Berlin.

Although BepiColombo flew through the same regions around Mercury during each of the previous three flybys, the probe’s instruments recorded varying counts of particles in the bubble-like magnetosphere carved out by the planet’s magnetic field, said Hayley Williamson, a senior scientist at the Swedish Institute for Space Physics and a co-investigator on BepiColombo’s SERENA instrument.

Mercury, as seen by the European-Japanese BepiColombo probe during its fourth flyby of the planet on Sept. 4, 2024. (Image credit: ESA/BepiColombo/MTM; Image processing and video production by Mark McCaughrean)

During the fourth and latest flyby on Sept. 4, which took BepiColombo just 103 miles (165 kilometers) above Mercury’s surface, the probe for the first time recorded planetary ions, which are charged particles wafting in Mercury’s magnetosphere after being blasted from its surface by the solar wind. Puzzlingly, those particles appeared to split into two different energy levels shortly after BepiColombo’s closest approach, Williamson said. All in all, it seems that Mercury was sporting a slightly different magnetic environment during each flyby.

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