...the who's who,
and the what's what 
of the space industry

Space Careers

pencil  Blog List

Displaying items by tag: InSight lander

Thursday, 17 October 2013 09:42

Insight Lander

InSight is a Mars lander mission planned by NASA for launch in 2016. The name stands for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport.

The mission's objective is to place a stationary lander equipped with a seismometer and heat flow probe on the surface of Mars to study its early geological evolution. This would bring new understanding of the Solar System's terrestrial planets — Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars — and Earth's Moon. By reusing technology from the Mars Phoenix lander, which successfully landed on Mars in 2008, it is expected that the cost and risk will be reduced.

InSight was initially known as GEMS (Geophysical Monitoring Station), but changed its name in early 2012 at the request of NASA. 

Published in Projects
Tagged under

Latest News ...

Rocket Lab launches radar imaging satellite for iQPS...
Rocket Lab launched the latest in a series of radar imaging satellites for a Japanese company May 1...

Read more

How to aerobrake a mission to Uranus on...
Enable JavaScript and cookies to continue This request seems a bit unusual, so we need to confirm ...

Read more

SES to demonstrate ‘satellite orchestration’ tech for military...
The network orchestration system could replace traditional PACE methodology in military communicati...

Read more

Landing on the moon is an incredibly difficult...
Enable JavaScript and cookies to continue This request seems a bit unusual, so we need to confirm ...

Read more

Week in images: 12-16 May 2025
Week in images: 12-16 May 2025 Discover our week through the lens

Read more

Martian resource potential and challenges for future human...
Enable JavaScript and cookies to continue This request seems a bit unusual, so we need to confirm ...

Read more

A CubeSat to capture a supernova's UV spectrum...
Enable JavaScript and cookies to continue This request seems a bit unusual, so we need to confirm ...

Read more

Filter:
Filter: