Won't the heat sensor probe interfere with the seismometer?











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I've read that the Mars InSight Seismometer will be deployed before the HP3 probe. Won't the digging interfere with the seismometer? Or the shock produced will be small enough to be dissipated by the ground?










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    I've read that the Mars InSight Seismometer will be deployed before the HP3 probe. Won't the digging interfere with the seismometer? Or the shock produced will be small enough to be dissipated by the ground?










    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    Nereid Regulus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      up vote
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      up vote
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      down vote

      favorite











      I've read that the Mars InSight Seismometer will be deployed before the HP3 probe. Won't the digging interfere with the seismometer? Or the shock produced will be small enough to be dissipated by the ground?










      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      Nereid Regulus is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      I've read that the Mars InSight Seismometer will be deployed before the HP3 probe. Won't the digging interfere with the seismometer? Or the shock produced will be small enough to be dissipated by the ground?







      mars nasa landing






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      edited Nov 27 at 15:45





















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      asked Nov 27 at 15:38









      Nereid Regulus

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          3 Answers
          3






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          As shown in the graph below, the digging of the HP3 probe is expected to occur between sol 50 and sol 90. This gives SEIS plenty of time before sol 50 and after sol 90 to take measurements. Furthermore, the graph shows that the actual time spent hammering is quite brief. Finally, although the hammering will indeed interfere with measurements of ambient seismic activity, the echoes from the hammering might reveal information about nearby subsurface geology, which is also valuable.



          RP3 digging graph






          share|improve this answer























          • I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
            – SF.
            Nov 28 at 9:35


















          up vote
          7
          down vote













          The digging may produce a seismometer reading, but that's not necessarily undesirable. They know exactly how the digging operation will be performed, so it's an opportunity to check the seismometer.






          share|improve this answer




























            up vote
            2
            down vote













            The digging is part of the experiment:



            "As the heat probe makes its way down, its hammering motion will generate vibrations. Scientists back on Earth can use the seismometer to detect these vibrations and study the ground beneath. As the heat probe hammers down, the seismometer should be able to measure the speed of the vibrational waves in the soil generated by the hammering motion. It should be able to detect reflections of these waves as they bounce off any shallow buried layers, such as lava flows, unveiling the structure of the subsurface"



            https://mars.nasa.gov/insight/timeline/surface-operations/






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              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              17
              down vote



              accepted










              As shown in the graph below, the digging of the HP3 probe is expected to occur between sol 50 and sol 90. This gives SEIS plenty of time before sol 50 and after sol 90 to take measurements. Furthermore, the graph shows that the actual time spent hammering is quite brief. Finally, although the hammering will indeed interfere with measurements of ambient seismic activity, the echoes from the hammering might reveal information about nearby subsurface geology, which is also valuable.



              RP3 digging graph






              share|improve this answer























              • I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
                – SF.
                Nov 28 at 9:35















              up vote
              17
              down vote



              accepted










              As shown in the graph below, the digging of the HP3 probe is expected to occur between sol 50 and sol 90. This gives SEIS plenty of time before sol 50 and after sol 90 to take measurements. Furthermore, the graph shows that the actual time spent hammering is quite brief. Finally, although the hammering will indeed interfere with measurements of ambient seismic activity, the echoes from the hammering might reveal information about nearby subsurface geology, which is also valuable.



              RP3 digging graph






              share|improve this answer























              • I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
                – SF.
                Nov 28 at 9:35













              up vote
              17
              down vote



              accepted







              up vote
              17
              down vote



              accepted






              As shown in the graph below, the digging of the HP3 probe is expected to occur between sol 50 and sol 90. This gives SEIS plenty of time before sol 50 and after sol 90 to take measurements. Furthermore, the graph shows that the actual time spent hammering is quite brief. Finally, although the hammering will indeed interfere with measurements of ambient seismic activity, the echoes from the hammering might reveal information about nearby subsurface geology, which is also valuable.



              RP3 digging graph






              share|improve this answer














              As shown in the graph below, the digging of the HP3 probe is expected to occur between sol 50 and sol 90. This gives SEIS plenty of time before sol 50 and after sol 90 to take measurements. Furthermore, the graph shows that the actual time spent hammering is quite brief. Finally, although the hammering will indeed interfere with measurements of ambient seismic activity, the echoes from the hammering might reveal information about nearby subsurface geology, which is also valuable.



              RP3 digging graph







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Nov 28 at 4:34

























              answered Nov 27 at 18:15









              Dr Sheldon

              3,9981342




              3,9981342












              • I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
                – SF.
                Nov 28 at 9:35


















              • I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
                – SF.
                Nov 28 at 9:35
















              I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
              – SF.
              Nov 28 at 9:35




              I'm not sure if there will be much of seismometer work before sol 50. During the livestream, a scientist from NASA said they will now prepare for deployment of the instruments (in particular, build a replica of the terrain around the lander, basing on the photos and early data, then performing the entire planned operation in lab conditions). He predicted this phase to take about two months.
              – SF.
              Nov 28 at 9:35










              up vote
              7
              down vote













              The digging may produce a seismometer reading, but that's not necessarily undesirable. They know exactly how the digging operation will be performed, so it's an opportunity to check the seismometer.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                7
                down vote













                The digging may produce a seismometer reading, but that's not necessarily undesirable. They know exactly how the digging operation will be performed, so it's an opportunity to check the seismometer.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  7
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  7
                  down vote









                  The digging may produce a seismometer reading, but that's not necessarily undesirable. They know exactly how the digging operation will be performed, so it's an opportunity to check the seismometer.






                  share|improve this answer












                  The digging may produce a seismometer reading, but that's not necessarily undesirable. They know exactly how the digging operation will be performed, so it's an opportunity to check the seismometer.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 27 at 15:51









                  Hobbes

                  83.3k2231373




                  83.3k2231373






















                      up vote
                      2
                      down vote













                      The digging is part of the experiment:



                      "As the heat probe makes its way down, its hammering motion will generate vibrations. Scientists back on Earth can use the seismometer to detect these vibrations and study the ground beneath. As the heat probe hammers down, the seismometer should be able to measure the speed of the vibrational waves in the soil generated by the hammering motion. It should be able to detect reflections of these waves as they bounce off any shallow buried layers, such as lava flows, unveiling the structure of the subsurface"



                      https://mars.nasa.gov/insight/timeline/surface-operations/






                      share|improve this answer

























                        up vote
                        2
                        down vote













                        The digging is part of the experiment:



                        "As the heat probe makes its way down, its hammering motion will generate vibrations. Scientists back on Earth can use the seismometer to detect these vibrations and study the ground beneath. As the heat probe hammers down, the seismometer should be able to measure the speed of the vibrational waves in the soil generated by the hammering motion. It should be able to detect reflections of these waves as they bounce off any shallow buried layers, such as lava flows, unveiling the structure of the subsurface"



                        https://mars.nasa.gov/insight/timeline/surface-operations/






                        share|improve this answer























                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          2
                          down vote









                          The digging is part of the experiment:



                          "As the heat probe makes its way down, its hammering motion will generate vibrations. Scientists back on Earth can use the seismometer to detect these vibrations and study the ground beneath. As the heat probe hammers down, the seismometer should be able to measure the speed of the vibrational waves in the soil generated by the hammering motion. It should be able to detect reflections of these waves as they bounce off any shallow buried layers, such as lava flows, unveiling the structure of the subsurface"



                          https://mars.nasa.gov/insight/timeline/surface-operations/






                          share|improve this answer












                          The digging is part of the experiment:



                          "As the heat probe makes its way down, its hammering motion will generate vibrations. Scientists back on Earth can use the seismometer to detect these vibrations and study the ground beneath. As the heat probe hammers down, the seismometer should be able to measure the speed of the vibrational waves in the soil generated by the hammering motion. It should be able to detect reflections of these waves as they bounce off any shallow buried layers, such as lava flows, unveiling the structure of the subsurface"



                          https://mars.nasa.gov/insight/timeline/surface-operations/







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 21 hours ago









                          JCRM

                          2,8382931




                          2,8382931






















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