Landing on Mercury on equator at perihelion |
Landing on Mercury on equator at perihelion |
Mar 21 2006, 12:18 AM
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 40 Joined: 20-March 06 Member No.: 720 |
How will it be to make a manned landing at Mercury at its closest to the sun (perihelion) on its equator when the sun is in the zenith ,what are the dangers of a landing then? Do we need to be protected against the sunheat and radiation then? How strong is the heat and radiation of the sun then ,and is it dangerous when the solaractivity is high then? What kind of spacesuits do we need then? Better protected suits than we have used on the apollo moonlandings i think. Can you explain how a landing on Mercury will be when it is at perihelion and land on its equator with the sun directly overhead? I hope it will ever happen. Lets start discuss about it.
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Guest_BruceMoomaw_* |
Mar 21 2006, 04:25 AM
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Guests |
A manned landing on Mercury at perihelion -- or an unmanned one, for that matter -- would be difficult as Hell (which may be appropriate). The problem wouldn't be as severe as that on a Venus lander, but it would be plenty hard -- you would not only need to have an extremely efficient reflecting shield to fend off the heat radiation from the Sun, but also another to deal with that being reflected and emitted from Mercury's surface. (This, in fact, is one reason why the Messenger orbiter will be put into a highly elliptical orbit around Mercury: to give it time to cool off again from each of its low-altitude periapses over Mercury's surface.) As for the design of any EVA walking suit that could cope with that heat: I shudder even to think about the problem. The high-energy particle radiation and X rays from the Sun at that range would also pose a very difficult problem for any manned mission that close to the Sun -- we'll have enough danger from those during long-duration manned trips to Mars and near-Earth asteroids.
However, temperature-wise, there are plenty of other places that either an unmanned or manned lander could touch down on Mercury that would be a cinch. Its near-polar regions are quite tolerably cool -- which is why it has ice as its poles -- and its nightside very quickly cools down after sunset, stays cold, and even stays within modest temperature ranges for a short time after sunrise again. A polar or nightside landing on Mercury is entirely feasible with the technology we have right now. The trouble, as usual, is simply money. Europe's BepiColombo, which consists of a large and low-altitude European orbiter and a small secondary Japanese one for magnetospheric studies, was originally also supposed to include a very small lander to touch down within about 3 degrees of the pole -- but, since Mercury is an airless world with a gravity field considerably stronger than the Moon's (and therefore requiring a larger mass of braking fuel), in the end the cost and mass of the lander was just too much for ESA's already-strained budget to endure and they cut it out of the mission. At some point it certainly will be done by someone; Mercury's surface almost certainly looks almost indistinguishable from the Moon's, but there are a great many interesting geophysical and compositional instruments they could land there on even a single lander. But that's likely to be a couple of decades off (at least), just for monetary reasons. |
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