One Full Year of Seismic Data Collected by Mars Insight Includes 500 Quakes

One Full Year of Seismic Data Collected by Mars Insight Includes 500 Quakes

The English vocabulary has some words that only make sense from an Earth-bound perspective.  Earthquake is one of those.  Even in some science fiction and fantasy books, where the action takes place somewhere other than Earth, that team is used to denote the ground shaking.  It’s therefore nice to see planetary scientists trying to expand the root word to other planets.  Marsquakes are the most commonly studied, and now thanks to InSight scientists have collected a full year of data on Marsquakes for the first time.

Led by Savan Ceylan of ETH Zurich, the team presented their findings at the 2021 Annual Meeting of the Seismological Society of America.  Data was collected from SEIS seismometer, an instrument on InSight that is physically touching the surface of Mars. It was extremely painstaking as Marsquake are generally much weaker than their Earthen cousins, with the maximum amplitude measuring 3.6 on the Richter scale.

False color image of the Cerberus Fossae region. Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona. /wp:image wp:paragraph Cerberus Fossae is a relatively young feature of the red planet that is still being studied to try to determine what makes it geologically active.  Tools like SEIS are one way to help determine that.  However, scientists looking to use it data will have to contend with one of the sensor world’s biggest problems - noise. /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph In some ways, the seismological noise on Mars is easier to deal with than that on Earth.  There are no waves constantly pounding the crust and the thin atmosphere is calm during the night.  However, even what little atmospheric disturbance there is on Mars can still disrupt readings, as can other unwanted noise from the weather and the lander itself. /wp:paragraph wp:image {"id":145096,"sizeSlug":"large","linkDestination":"none"} Depiction of how insight is able to detect quakes at different locations.Credit: Giardini et all /wp:image wp:paragraph Dr. Ceylan’s team managed to work out a filtering method that allowed them to properly understand even the very small marsquakes that InSight was able to pick up.  With that filter comes a better mechanism for future studies of Mars’ seismological activity.  Someday there might even be humans on the planet to place seismometers in even more interesting places.  Then we will really be able to understand the difference between an earthquake and a marsquake. /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph Learn More:SSA - Seismicity on Mars Full of Surprises, in First Continuous Year of Data CollectionUT - After a Challenging First Year on Mars, InSight Shows Us that Mars is Seismically ActiveUT - InSight Has Already Detected 21 MarsquakesUT - InSight Just Detected its First “Marsquake” /wp:paragraph wp:paragraph Learn Image: Image of Mars.Credit: NASA / JPL - Caltech / ETH Zurch / Van Driel /wp:paragraph

Andy Tomaswick

Andy Tomaswick

Andy has been interested in space exploration ever since reading Pale Blue Dot in middle school. An engineer by training, he likes to focus on the practical challenges of space exploration, whether that's getting rid of perchlorates on Mars or making ultra-smooth mirrors to capture ever clearer data. When not writing or engineering things he can be found entertaining his wife, four children, six cats, and two dogs, or running in circles to stay in shape.