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Mars orbiter spots retired InSight lander to study dust movement"Even though we're no longer hearing from InSight, it's still teaching us about Mars," said science team member Ingrid Daubar of Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. "By monitoring how ...
If I can keep talking to my mission team, I will – but I’ll be ... one tenth of what it had been at launch, as Mars' red dust had covered InSight's solar panels and greatly reduced its ...
The InSight lander has successfully touched down on Mars, beginning a two-year mission to peer deep inside the red planet's interior. Technicians and engineers inspect the heat shield for the ...
NASA's $850 million InSight Lander is the first designed to study the interior structure of Mars. Until now, NASA's landers mainly focused on exploring Mars' surface for signs of potential life.
NASA sent the InSight robot to Mars with a number of objectives in mind. Since its time on the planet, the robot has become the first Martian weatherman and done its best to jam its probe into a M ...
The Mars water debate continues. A team of scientists suggests vast oceans of water may not be locked within the Red Planet's ...
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New Scientist on MSNMost quakes on Mars happen during the summer – and we don’t know whyNASA’s InSight lander recorded surprisingly large quakes that indicate Mars is more seismically active than we first thought.
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