InSight craft powers down on Mars due to dust coating on solar panels

InSight landed on Mars in 2018 and was first spacecraft to document a ‘marsquake’

Nasa’s InSight lander on Mars. The lander’s power levels have been dwindling for months because of dust coating its solar panels. Photograph: NASA/AP/PA
Nasa’s InSight lander on Mars. The lander’s power levels have been dwindling for months because of dust coating its solar panels. Photograph: NASA/AP/PA

It could be the end of the red dusty line for Nasa’s InSight lander, which has fallen silent after four years on Mars.

The lander’s power levels have been dwindling for months because of dust coating its solar panels. Ground controllers at California’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory knew the end was near, but Nasa reported that InSight unexpectedly did not respond to communications from Earth on Sunday.

“It’s assumed InSight may have reached the end of its operations,” Nasa said, adding that its last communication occurred on Thursday. “It’s unknown what prompted the change in its energy.”

The team will keep trying to contact InSight.

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InSight landed on Mars in 2018 and was the first spacecraft to document a “marsquake”. It detected more than 1,300 marsquakes with its French-built seismometer, including several caused by meteoroid strikes.

The most recent marsquake sensed by InSight, earlier this year, left the ground shaking for at least six hours, according to Nasa.

The seismometer readings shed light on Mars’s interior.

Just last week, scientists revealed that InSight had scored another first, capturing a Martian dust devil not just in pictures but in sound, when the whirling column of dust blew directly over the lander in 2021 with its microphone on.

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The lander’s other main instrument, however, ran into trouble.

A German digging device – meant to measure the temperature of Mars’s interior – never made it deeper than a half a metre into the ground, well short of the intended five metres. Nasa declared it dead nearly two years ago.

The area in front of the InSight Mars lander, taken from its robotic arm-mounted Instrument Deployment Camera. The stationary robotic probe on Mars has been steadily growing weaker as dust accumulates on its solar panels. Photograph: NASA/JPL-Caltech
The area in front of the InSight Mars lander, taken from its robotic arm-mounted Instrument Deployment Camera. The stationary robotic probe on Mars has been steadily growing weaker as dust accumulates on its solar panels. Photograph: NASA/JPL-Caltech

InSight recently sent back one last image, shared by Nasa on Twitter on Monday.

“My power’s really low, so this may be the last image I can send,” the team wrote on InSight’s behalf. “Don’t worry about me though: my time here has been both productive and serene. If I can keep talking to my mission team, I will – but I’ll be signing off here soon. Thanks for staying with me.”

Nasa still has two active rovers on Mars: Curiosity, roaming the surface since 2012, and Perseverance, which arrived early last year.

Perseverance is in the midst of creating a sample depot; the plan is to leave 10 tubes of rock cores on the Martian surface as a back-up to samples on the rover itself. Nasa plans to bring some of these samples back to Earth in a decade’s time, as part of its long-time search for signs of ancient microscopic life on Mars.

Perseverance also has a companion: a mini helicopter named Ingenuity. It has recently completed its 37th flight and has now logged more than an hour of Martian flight time. – Associated Press