P53A-2108
Studying the surface of Mercury with BepiColombo

Friday, 18 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Jorn Helbert, German Aerospace Center DLR Berlin, Berlin, Germany and Johannes Benkhoff, ESTEC, Noordwijk, 2201, Netherlands
Abstract:
The payload of the ESA-JAXA mission BepiColombo had been proposed long before the NASA MESSENGER mission provided us with new insights into the innermost of the terrestrial planets. The discoveries of the MESSENGER fundamentally changed our view of Mercury. It revealed a surface that has been reshaped by volcanism over large parts of geological history. Volatile elements like sulfur have been detected with unexpectedly high abundances of up to 4%. MESSENGER imagined structures that are most likely formed by pyroclastic eruptions in recent geologic history. Among the most exciting discoveries of MESSENGER are hollows – bright irregularly shaped depressions that show sign of ongoing loss of material.

BepiColombo will be building on what has been learned from the MESSENGER mission and extend the knowledge. Due to its more circular orbit BepiColombo will provide good spatial resolution for both hemispheres of Mercury. The mission will give us the first good look at the southern hemisphere of the planet.

All spectral instruments are imaging and cover a wider spectral range than the instruments on MESSENGER. Some instruments will provide us datasets that have not been obtained by MESSENGER in any form. MERTIS will for example provide the first temperature map of Mercury and will map the surface composition of the planet for the first time in the thermal infrared. The telescopic imaging channel of the XRS instrument will provide elemental composition at an unprecedented spatial resolution.

The MESSENGER results will be key to formulate the observation plan for the surface instruments on BepiColombo. They also have motivated a wide range of laboratory experiments that will help to better understand the results returned by the suite of instruments.