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The InSight Mission – Seismology on Mars and Beyond [Poster]

Date: 4/25/2019

Time: 6:00 PM to 11:00 PM

Room: Fifth Avenue

The InSight mission landed on Mars on November 26, 2018 and was the first to place an ultra-sensitive broad band seismometer on the surface of another planet. It will provide key information on the composition and structure of an Earth-like planet that has gone through most of the evolutionary stages of the Earth up to, but not including, plate tectonics. Using seismology, geodesy and heat flow measurement, InSight aims to determine the thickness and structure of the Martian crust and mantle, the size and state of the core, the planet’s thermal state and the level of tectonic activity and rate of meteorite impacts.

The two-year (one Mars year) InSight mission ushers in a new era in planetary seismology. In the coming years and decades NASA may launch missions to explore the interiors of our Moon, Venus and the “Ocean Worlds” of the Solar System (e.g., Europa, Enceladus and Titan). Other Space agencies might also launch additional missions with seismometers. While the focus of these mission concepts vary from fundamental geophysics to detection of life and conditions for life, seismological exploration of planetary bodies’ interiors is likely to play a key role in understanding planetary state and evolution by helping to determine their thermal and chemical make-up.

We invite contributions that provide overviews of the InSight mission, including description of its experiments, instruments, models, data access and services, as well as observations made in the first few months of operation. We also invite contributions that describe past and future seismological exploration of the Solar System.

Conveners

Sharon Kedar, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (sharon.kedar@jpl.nasa.gov)
Mark Panning, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (mark.p.panning@jpl.nasa.gov)
Bruce Banerdt, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (william.b.banerdt@jpl.nasa.gov)

Poster Presentations

Participant RoleDetailsAction
SubmissionMarsquake Service for InSight: Methods to Locate Events in a 3D PlanetView
SubmissionMarsquake Service for InSight: Preliminary Observations and OperationsView
SubmissionInnovative Ground Motion Sensors for Planets and Asteroids: Pioneers H2020-Space European ProjectView
SubmissionTowards Planetary Remote-Sensing Seismology: Modeling the Airglow Signature of Venus QuakesView
SubmissionThe Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure (SEIS) Experiment Data DistributionView
SubmissionProbabilistic Source Inversion Using Body Wave Coda From a Single Seismic Station (InSight)View
SubmissionLunar Seismometer and Burial SystemView
SubmissionSeismo-Acoustic Waves Propagation in the Atmosphere of Mars during the InSight missionView
SubmissionComparison of the InSight Seismometer Characteristics on Mars With Tests on EarthView
SubmissionA Further Application of the Cepstral Stacking Method to Determine Focal Depths of MarsquakesView
SubmissionCharacterization of the InSight Landing Site Near Surface Properties Using the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Probe (Hp3) Mole as a Seismic SourceView
SubmissionInSight Lessons on Science Potential From On-Deck Operation of a Broadband SeismometerView
SubmissionLeveraging Researcher Data Access to Promote Student Engagement With Martian Seismic DataView
 
View __ Presentations

The InSight Mission – Seismology on Mars and Beyond [Poster]

Description