As planets go, Mercury is a world of extremes – and one which doesn’t at all times make a substantial amount of sense. Its iron core is absurdly and inexplicably large. Regardless of its searing temperature, it has ice trapped at its poles. It’s also pummelled on daily basis by wild photo voltaic storms – the likes of which Earth solely experiences as soon as a century.
Suzie Imber hopes she may also help us get to know the planet slightly higher by means of her work as a co-investigator with Europe and Japan’s BepiColombo mission, which final week made its last and closest flyby of Mercury, serving to it to decelerate earlier than it enters orbit in 2026. Imber, based mostly on the College of Leicester, UK, is an knowledgeable on house climate and says her research of Mercury may assist us put together for the worst photo voltaic storms right here on Earth. She was additionally, in 2017, the winner of the BBC’s Astronauts: Do you could have what it takes?, a gauntlet that pitted contestants towards the rigours of house journey.
Imber instructed New Scientist why she is so enthusiastic about sending a mission to Mercury, what we hope to find out about this intriguing planet and whether or not she would possibly at some point enterprise out to the ultimate frontier herself.
Jonathan O’Callaghan: Why are we returning to Mercury now?
Suzie Imber: There are a great deal of causes. From a high-level perspective, it’s a fairly unexplored planet. We’ve had three flybys and one orbital mission – NASA’s MESSENGER, which orbited between 2011 and 2015 – however the extra we study,…