- Between laughs and 'disaster', Trump divides Davos
- Hundreds of people protest ahead of Swiss Davos meeting
- US falling behind on wind power, think tank warns
- US news giant CNN eyes 200 job cuts, streaming overhaul
- Rubio chooses Central America for first trip amid Panama Canal pressure
- Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally falters, oil slumps
- Trump tells Davos elites: produce in US or pay tariffs
- Progressive politics and nepo 'babies': five Oscar takeaways
- American Airlines shares fall on lackluster 2025 profit outlook
- France to introduce new sex education guidelines in schools
- Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally falters
- Drinking water in many French cities contaminated: study
- After Musk gesture, activists project 'Heil' on Tesla plant
- ICC prosecutor seeks arrest of Taliban leaders over persecution of women
- Syria's economy reborn after being freed from Assad
- Shoppers unaware as Roman tower lurks under French supermarket
- Stocks mainly rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Singer Chris Brown sues Warner Bros for $500 mn over documentary
- J-pop star Nakai to retire after sexual misconduct allegations
- Leaky, crowded and hot: Louvre boss slams her own museum
- WWF blasts Sweden, Finland over logging practices
- How things stand in China-US trade tensions with Trump 2.0
- Most Asian markets rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Fire-hit Hollywood awaits Oscar nominees, with 'Emilia Perez' in front
- New rider in town: Somalia's first woman equestrian turns heads
- Most Asian markets extend AI-fuelled rally
- Bangladesh student revolutionaries' dreams dented by joblessness
- Larry Ellison, tech's original maverick, makes Trump era return
- Political crisis hits South Korea growth: central bank
- Photonis Launches Two Market-Leading Solutions to Advance Single Photon Detection and Imaging Applications
- Les Paul owned by guitar god Jeff Beck auctioned for over £1 mn
- Musk bashes Trump-backed AI mega project
- Does China control the Panama Canal, as Trump claims?
- Yemen's Huthis say freed detained ship's crew after Gaza truce
- Mel B, Trump and Milei: What happened at Davos Wednesday
- Argentina's Milei says would leave Mercosur for US trade deal
- Fashion world 'afraid' of Trump, says Van Beirendonck
- P&G sees China improvement but consumers 'still struggling'
- Stock markets mostly higher as they track Trump plans, earnings
- Anti-Semitic acts at 'historic' highs in France despite 2024 fall: council
- Trump's meme coin venture sparks backlash
- Global green energy push likely to continue despite Trump climate retreat: UN
- Prince Harry settles lawsuit against Murdoch's UK tabloids
- Stock markets diverge tracking Trump plans
- Sudan 'political' banknote switch causes cash crunch
- Masa Son, Trump's Japanese buddy with the Midas Touch
- Borussia Dortmund sack coach Nuri Sahin after Champions League setback
- 'Love for humanity': Low-crime Japan's unpaid parole officers
- Brazil saw 79% jump in area burned by fires in 2024: monitor
- No home, no insurance: The double hit from Los Angeles fires
End of the line nears for NASA InSight Mars lander
After some four years probing Mars' interior, NASA's InSight lander will likely retire this summer as accumulated dust on its solar panels saps its power.
The lander will, however, leave behind a legacy of data that will be tapped by scientists around the world for years to come, helping to improve our understanding of planet formation, NASA said, while announcing on Tuesday the imminent end to InSight's science operations.
Equiped with an ultra-sensitive seismometer, InSight recorded more than 1,300 "marsquakes," including a magnitude 5 quake on May 4, the largest so far.
But around July, the seismometer will be turned off.
The lander's energy level will then be checked about once a day, and some pictures may still be taken. Then by the end of 2022, the mission will be completely stopped.
The cause: the accumulation over months of Martian dust on the lander's two solar panels, each measuring about seven feet (2.2 meters) wide.
InSight, which is already running on only a tenth of the energy it had at the beginning, will soon find its batteries drained.
The speed at which dust accumulated corresponded more or less to what had been estimated by NASA.
The lander got a new lease on life around a year ago, when its robotic arm was put to new and unplanned use to remove some dust from the solar panels, extending the mission.
The maneuver -- employed six times successfully -- saw the arm use dust itself to clear the panels, as it scooped up some martian soil and gently dropped onto the robot so the dirt was blown across the solar panels, clearing parts of their surface.
Adding something to the lander specifically to clean the panels was forgone due to costs, explained Bruce Banerdt of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, during a press conference Tuesday.
Such a mechanism would leave "less to put into the science instruments," he said.
- 'Treasure trove' -
InSight, one of four missions currently on the Red Planet -- along with the US rovers Perseverance and Curiosity, and China's Zhurong -- arrived on Mars in November 2018.
Its seismometer, made in France, has since paved the way for great advances.
"The interior was kind of just a giant question mark," said Banerdt, who has worked on the InSight mission for more than a decade.
But thanks to InSight, "we've been able to map out the inside of Mars for the very first time in history."
Seismic waves, varying based on the materials they pass through, offer a picture of the interior of the planet.
For example, scientists were able to confirm that the core of Mars is liquid and to determine the thickness of the Martian crust -- less dense than previously thought and likely consisting of three layers.
The magnitude 5 quake in early May was much larger than all those previously recorded and close to what scientists thought would be the maximum on Mars, though it would not be considered a huge tremor on Earth.
"This quake is really going to be a treasure trove of scientific information when we get our teeth into it," Banerdt said.
Earthquakes are in particular caused by plate tectonics, he explained. But, they can also be triggered when the Earth's crust moves due to temperature anomalies caused by its mantle.
It is this type of vibration that scientists think they are dealing with on Mars.
Not all of InSight's scientific operations have gone smoothly, however, such as when its heat probe had trouble being successfully buried below the surface to take the planet's temperature because of the composition of the soil where the robot landed.
Regardless, in light of the seismometer's success, NASA is considering using the technique elsewhere in the future, said Lori Glaze, director of NASA's Planetary Science Division.
"We'd really like to set up a complete network on the moon to really understand what's going on there."
Ng.A.Adebayo--CPN