Mercury
Mercury
Mercury
It is a terrestrial
planet with a heavily cratered surface due to overlapping impact events. These features are well
preserved since the planet has no geological activity and an extremely tenuous atmosphere called
an exosphere. Despite being the smallest planet in the Solar System with a mean diameter of
4,880 km (3,030 mi), 38% of that of Earth, Mercury is dense enough to have roughly the same
surface gravity as Mars. Mercury has a dynamic magnetic field with a strength about 1% of that of
Earth's and has no natural satellites.
According to current models, Mercury may have a solid silicate crust and mantle overlying a solid
outer core, a deeper liquid core layer, and a solid inner core. Having almost no atmosphere to retain
heat, Mercury has surface temperatures that change wildly during the day, ranging from 100 K
(−173 °C; −280 °F) at night to 700 K (427 °C; 800 °F) during sunlight across the equator regions.
[19]
At Mercury's poles there are large reservoirs of water ices that are never exposed to direct
sunlight, which has an estimated mass of about 0.025–0.25% the Antarctic ice sheet.[20] There are
many competing hypotheses about Mercury's origins and development, some of which incorporate
collision with planetesimal and rock vaporization.
Because Mercury is very close to the Sun, the intensity of sunlight on its surface is between 4.59
and 10.61 times the Sun's typical energy received by the Earth: the solar constant. Mercury orbits
the Sun in a 3:2 spin–orbit resonance, meaning that relative to the background stars, it rotates on its
axis exactly three times for every two revolutions it makes around the Sun.[a][21] Counterintuitively, due
to Mercury's slow rotation, an observer on the planet would see only one Mercurian solar day (176
Earth days) every two Mercurian solar years (88 Earth days each).[4] Mercury's axis has the
smallest tilt of any of the Solar System's planets, about 1⁄30 of a degree, and its orbital eccentricity is
the largest of all known planets in the Solar System.[b]
Like Venus, Mercury orbits the Sun within Earth's orbit, making it appear in Earth's sky only as a
"morning star" or "evening star" that is relatively close to the Sun. In English, it is named after the
Roman god Mercurius (Mercury), god of commerce, communication and the messenger of gods.
Mercury is the most difficult planet to reach from Earth because it requires the greatest change in a
spacecraft's velocity. Only three spacecraft have visited Mercury as of 2023: Mariner 10 flew by in
1974 and 1975; MESSENGER, launched in 2004, flew by Mercury first in 2008 and orbited it over
4,000 times between 2011 and 2015; the BepiColombo spacecraft flew by Mercury first in 2021, and
it is scheduled to make its final arrival at Mercury in 2025, where it will then insert two orbiters.
Nomenclature
The ancients knew Mercury by different names depending on whether it was an evening star or a
morning star. By about 350 BC, the ancient Greeks had realized the two stars were one.[22] They
knew the planet as Στίλβων Stilbōn, meaning "twinkling", and Ἑρμής Hermēs, for its fleeting motion,
[23]
a name that is retained in modern Greek (Ερμής Ermis).[24] The Romans named the planet after
the swift-footed Roman messenger god, Mercury (Latin Mercurius), whom they equated with the
Greek Hermes, because it moves across the sky faster than any other planet.[22][25] The astronomical
symbol for Mercury is a stylized version of Hermes' caduceus; a Christian cross was added in the
16th century: .[26][27]
Physical characteristics
Mercury is one of four terrestrial planets in the Solar System, which means it is a rocky body like
Earth. It is the smallest planet in the Solar System, with an equatorial radius of 2,439.7 kilometres
(1,516.0 mi).[4] Mercury is also smaller—albeit more massive—than the largest natural satellites in
the Solar System, Ganymede and Titan. Mercury consists of approximately 70% metallic and
30% silicate material.[28]
Internal structure
Surface geology
Main article: Geology of Mercury
Mercury's surface is similar in appearance to that of the Moon, showing extensive mare-like plains
and heavy cratering, indicating that it has been geologically inactive for billions of years. It is
more heterogeneous than the surface of Mars or the Moon, both of which contain significant
stretches of similar geology, such as maria and plateaus.[50] Albedo features are areas of markedly
different reflectivity, which include impact craters, the resulting ejecta, and ray systems. Larger
albedo features correspond to higher reflectivity plains.[51] Mercury has "wrinkle-ridges" (dorsa),
Moon-like highlands, mountains (montes), plains (planitiae), escarpments (rupes), and valleys
(valles).[52][53]
The surface temperature of Mercury ranges from 100 to 700 K (−173 to 427 °C; −280 to 800 °F).[19] It
never rises above 180 K at the poles,[14] due to the absence of an atmosphere and a steep
temperature gradient between the equator and the poles. At perihelion, the equatorial subsolar
point is located at latitude 0°W or 180°W, and it climbs to a temperature of about 700 K.
During aphelion, this occurs at 90° or 270°W, and reaches only 550 K.[81] On the dark side of the
planet, temperatures average 110 K.[14][82] The intensity of sunlight on Mercury's surface ranges
between 4.59 and 10.61 times the solar constant (1,370 W·m−2).[83]
Although daylight temperatures at the surface of Mercury are generally extremely high, observations
strongly suggest that ice (frozen water) exists on Mercury. The floors of deep craters at the poles are
never exposed to direct sunlight, and temperatures there remain below 102 K, far lower than the
global average.[84] This creates a cold trap where ice can accumulate. Water ice strongly
reflects radar, and observations by the 70-meter Goldstone Solar System Radar and the VLA in the
early 1990s revealed that there are patches of high radar reflection near the poles.[85] Although ice
was not the only possible cause of these reflective regions, astronomers think it was the most likely.
[86]
The presence of water ice was confirmed using MESSENGER images of craters at the north pole.
[80]
The icy crater regions are estimated to contain about 1014–1015 kg of ice,[20] and may be covered by a
layer of regolith that inhibits sublimation.[87] By comparison, the Antarctic ice sheet on Earth has a
mass of about 4×1018 kg, and Mars's south polar cap contains about 1016 kg of water.[20] The origin of
the ice on Mercury is not yet known, but the two most likely sources are from outgassing of water
from the planet's interior and deposition by impacts of comets.[20]
Mercury is too small and hot for its gravity to retain any significant atmosphere over long periods of
time; it does have a tenuous surface-bounded exosphere[88] at a surface pressure of less than
approximately 0.5 nPa (0.005 picobars).[4] It
includes hydrogen, helium, oxygen, sodium, calcium, potassium, magnesium, silicon, and hydroxide,
among others.[17][18] This exosphere is not stable—atoms are continuously lost and replenished from a
variety of sources. Hydrogen atoms and helium atoms probably come from the solar
wind, diffusing into Mercury's magnetosphere before later escaping back into space. Radioactive
decay of elements within Mercury's crust is another source of helium, as well as sodium and
potassium. Water vapor is present, released by a combination of processes such as: comets striking
its surface, sputtering creating water out of hydrogen from the solar wind and oxygen from rock, and
sublimation from reservoirs of water ice in the permanently shadowed polar craters. The detection of
high amounts of water-related ions like O+, OH−, and H3O+ was a surprise.[89][90] Because of the
quantities of these ions that were detected in Mercury's space environment, scientists surmise that
these molecules were blasted from the surface or exosphere by the solar wind.[91][92]
Sodium, potassium and calcium were discovered in the atmosphere during the 1980s–1990s, and
are thought to result primarily from the vaporization of surface rock struck by micrometeorite
impacts[93] including presently from Comet Encke.[94] In 2008, magnesium was discovered
by MESSENGER.[95] Studies indicate that, at times, sodium emissions are localized at points that
correspond to the planet's magnetic poles. This would indicate an interaction between the
magnetosphere and the planet's surface.[96]
According to NASA, Mercury is not a suitable planet for Earth-like life. It has a surface boundary
exosphere instead of a layered atmosphere, extreme temperatures, and high solar radiation. It is
unlikely that any living beings can withstand those conditions.[97] Some parts of the subsurface of
Mercury may have been habitable, and perhaps life forms, albeit likely primitive microorganisms,
may have existed on the planet.[98][99][100]
Mercury has the most eccentric orbit of all the planets in the Solar System; its eccentricity is 0.21
with its distance from the Sun ranging from 46,000,000 to 70,000,000 km (29,000,000 to
43,000,000 mi). It takes 87.969 Earth days to complete an orbit. The diagram illustrates the effects
of the eccentricity, showing Mercury's orbit overlaid with a circular orbit having the same semi-major
axis. Mercury's higher velocity when it is near perihelion is clear from the greater distance it covers in
each 5-day interval. In the diagram, the varying distance of Mercury to the Sun is represented by the
size of the planet, which is inversely proportional to Mercury's distance from the Sun. This varying
distance to the Sun leads to Mercury's surface being flexed by tidal bulges raised by the Sun that are
about 17 times stronger than the Moon's on Earth.[109] Combined with a 3:2 spin–orbit resonance of
the planet's rotation around its axis, it also results in complex variations of the surface temperature.
[28]
The resonance makes a single solar day (the length between two meridian transits of the Sun) on
Mercury last exactly two Mercury years, or about 176 Earth days.[110]
Mercury's orbit is inclined by 7 degrees to the plane of Earth's orbit (the ecliptic), the largest of all
eight known solar planets.[111] As a result, transits of Mercury across the face of the Sun can only
occur when the planet is crossing the plane of the ecliptic at the time it lies between Earth and the
Sun, which is in May or November. This occurs about every seven years on average.[112]
Mercury's axial tilt is almost zero,[113] with the best measured value as low as 0.027 degrees.[114] This is
significantly smaller than that of Jupiter, which has the second smallest axial tilt of all planets at 3.1
degrees. This means that to an observer at Mercury's poles, the center of the Sun never rises more
than 2.1 arcminutes above the horizon.[114] By comparison, the angular size of the Sun as seen from
Mercury ranges from 1+1⁄4 to 2 degrees across.[115]
At certain points on Mercury's surface, an observer would be able to see the Sun peek up a little
more than two-thirds of the way over the horizon, then reverse and set before rising again, all within
the same Mercurian day.[c] This is because approximately four Earth days before perihelion,
Mercury's angular orbital velocity equals its angular rotational velocity so that the Sun's apparent
motion ceases; closer to perihelion, Mercury's angular orbital velocity then exceeds the angular
rotational velocity. Thus, to a hypothetical observer on Mercury, the Sun appears to move in
a retrograde direction. Four Earth days after perihelion, the Sun's normal apparent motion resumes.
[28]
A similar effect would have occurred if Mercury had been in synchronous rotation: the alternating
gain and loss of rotation over a revolution would have caused a libration of 23.65° in longitude.[116]
For the same reason, there are two points on Mercury's equator, 180 degrees apart in longitude, at
either of which, around perihelion in alternate Mercurian years (once a Mercurian day), the Sun
passes overhead, then reverses its apparent motion and passes overhead again, then reverses a
second time and passes overhead a third time, taking a total of about 16 Earth-days for this entire
process. In the other alternate Mercurian years, the same thing happens at the other of these two
points. The amplitude of the retrograde motion is small, so the overall effect is that, for two or three
weeks, the Sun is almost stationary overhead, and is at its most brilliant because Mercury is at
perihelion, its closest to the Sun. This prolonged exposure to the Sun at its brightest makes these
two points the hottest places on Mercury. Maximum temperature occurs when the Sun is at an angle
of about 25 degrees past noon due to diurnal temperature lag, at 0.4 Mercury days and 0.8 Mercury
years past sunrise.[117] Conversely, there are two other points on the equator, 90 degrees of longitude
apart from the first ones, where the Sun passes overhead only when the planet is at aphelion in
alternate years, when the apparent motion of the Sun in Mercury's sky is relatively rapid. These
points, which are the ones on the equator where the apparent retrograde motion of the Sun happens
when it is crossing the horizon as described in the preceding paragraph, receive much less solar
heat than the first ones described above.[118]
Mercury attains an inferior conjunction (nearest approach to Earth) every 116 Earth days on
average,[4] but this interval can range from 105 days to 129 days due to the planet's eccentric orbit.
Mercury can come as near as 82,200,000 km (0.549 astronomical units; 51.1 million miles) to Earth,
and that is slowly declining: The next approach to within 82,100,000 km (51 million mi) is in 2679,
and to within 82,000,000 km (51 million mi) in 4487, but it will not be closer to Earth than
80,000,000 km (50 million mi) until 28,622.[119] Its period of retrograde motion as seen from Earth can
vary from 8 to 15 days on either side of an inferior conjunction. This large range arises from the
planet's high orbital eccentricity.[28] Essentially, because Mercury is closest to the Sun, when taking
an average over time, Mercury is most often the closest planet to the Earth,[120][121] and—in that
measure—it is the closest planet to each of the other planets in the Solar System.[122][123][124][d]
Longitude convention
The longitude convention for Mercury puts the zero of longitude at one of the two hottest points on
the surface, as described above. However, when this area was first visited, by Mariner 10, this zero
meridian was in darkness, so it was impossible to select a feature on the surface to define the exact
position of the meridian. Therefore, a small crater further west was chosen, called Hun Kal, which
provides the exact reference point for measuring longitude.[125][126] The center of Hun Kal defines the
20° west meridian. A 1970 International Astronomical Union resolution suggests that longitudes be
measured positively in the westerly direction on Mercury.[127] The two hottest places on the equator
are therefore at longitudes 0° W and 180° W, and the coolest points on the equator are at longitudes
90° W and 270° W. However, the MESSENGER project uses an east-positive convention.[128]
Spin-orbit resonance
After one orbit, Mercury has rotated 1.5 times, so after two
complete orbits the same hemisphere is again illuminated.
For many years it was thought that Mercury was synchronously tidally locked with the
Sun, rotating once for each orbit and always keeping the same face directed towards the Sun, in the
same way that the same side of the Moon always faces Earth. Radar observations in 1965 proved
that the planet has a 3:2 spin-orbit resonance, rotating three times for every two revolutions around
the Sun. The eccentricity of Mercury's orbit makes this resonance stable—at perihelion, when the
solar tide is strongest, the Sun is nearly stationary in Mercury's sky.[129]
The 3:2 resonant tidal locking is stabilized by the variance of the tidal force along Mercury's eccentric
orbit, acting on a permanent dipole component of Mercury's mass distribution.[130] In a circular orbit
there is no such variance, so the only resonance stabilized in such an orbit is at 1:1 (e.g., Earth–
Moon), when the tidal force, stretching a body along the "center-body" line, exerts a torque that
aligns the body's axis of least inertia (the "longest" axis, and the axis of the aforementioned dipole)
to always point at the center. However, with noticeable eccentricity, like that of Mercury's orbit, the
tidal force has a maximum at perihelion and therefore stabilizes resonances, like 3:2, ensuring that
the planet points its axis of least inertia roughly at the Sun when passing through perihelion.[130]
The original reason astronomers thought it was synchronously locked was that, whenever Mercury
was best placed for observation, it was always nearly at the same point in its 3:2 resonance, hence
showing the same face. This is because, coincidentally, Mercury's rotation period is almost exactly
half of its synodic period with respect to Earth. Due to Mercury's 3:2 spin-orbit resonance, a solar
day lasts about 176 Earth days.[28] A sidereal day (the period of rotation) lasts about 58.7 Earth days.
[28]
Simulations indicate that the orbital eccentricity of Mercury varies chaotically from nearly zero
(circular) to more than 0.45 over millions of years due to perturbations from the other planets.[28]
[131]
This was thought to explain Mercury's 3:2 spin-orbit resonance (rather than the more usual 1:1),
because this state is more likely to arise during a period of high eccentricity.[132] However, accurate
modeling based on a realistic model of tidal response has demonstrated that Mercury was captured
into the 3:2 spin-orbit state at a very early stage of its history, within 20 (more likely, 10) million years
after its formation.[133]
Numerical simulations show that a future secular orbital resonant interaction with the perihelion of
Jupiter may cause the eccentricity of Mercury's orbit to increase to the point where there is a 1%
chance that the orbit will be destabilized in the next five billion years. If this happens, Mercury may
fall into the Sun, collide with Venus, be ejected from the Solar System, or even disrupt the rest of the
inner Solar System.[134][135]
Advance of perihelion
Main article: Perihelion precession of Mercury
Observation
Observation history
Ancient astronomers
Elongation is the angle between the Sun and the planet, with
Earth as the reference point. Mercury appears close to the Sun.
The first telescopic observations of Mercury were made by Thomas Harriot and Galileo from 1610. In
1612, Simon Marius observed the brightness of Mercury varied with the planet's orbital position and
concluded it had phases "in the same way as Venus and the Moon".[167] In 1631, Pierre
Gassendi made the first telescopic observations of the transit of a planet across the Sun when he
saw a transit of Mercury predicted by Johannes Kepler. In 1639, Giovanni Zupi used a telescope to
discover that the planet had orbital phases similar to Venus and the Moon. The observation
demonstrated conclusively that Mercury orbited the Sun.[28]
A rare event in astronomy is the passage of one planet in front of another (occultation), as seen from
Earth. Mercury and Venus occult each other every few centuries, and the event of May 28, 1737, is
the only one historically observed, having been seen by John Bevis at the Royal Greenwich
Observatory.[168] The next occultation of Mercury by Venus will be on December 3, 2133.[169]
The difficulties inherent in observing Mercury meant that it was far less studied than the other
planets. In 1800, Johann Schröter made observations of surface features, claiming to have observed
20-kilometre-high (12 mi) mountains. Friedrich Bessel used Schröter's drawings to erroneously
estimate the rotation period as 24 hours and an axial tilt of 70°.[170] In the 1880s, Giovanni
Schiaparelli mapped the planet more accurately, and suggested that Mercury's rotational period was
88 days, the same as its orbital period due to tidal locking.[171] This phenomenon is known
as synchronous rotation. The effort to map the surface of Mercury was continued by Eugenios
Antoniadi, who published a book in 1934 that included both maps and his own observations.[96] Many
of the planet's surface features, particularly the albedo features, take their names from Antoniadi's
map.[172]
In June 1962, Soviet scientists at the Institute of Radio-engineering and Electronics of the USSR
Academy of Sciences, led by Vladimir Kotelnikov, became the first to bounce a radar signal off
Mercury and receive it, starting radar observations of the planet.[173][174][175] Three years later, radar
observations by Americans Gordon H. Pettengill and Rolf B. Dyce, using the 300-metre-wide
(330 yd) Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico, showed conclusively that the planet's rotational
period was about 59 days.[176][177] The theory that Mercury's rotation was synchronous had become
widely held, and it was a surprise to astronomers when these radio observations were announced. If
Mercury were tidally locked, its dark face would be extremely cold, but measurements of radio
emission revealed that it was much hotter than expected. Astronomers were reluctant to drop the
synchronous rotation theory and proposed alternative mechanisms such as powerful heat-
distributing winds to explain the observations.[178]
Reaching Mercury from Earth poses significant technical challenges, because it orbits so much
closer to the Sun than Earth. A Mercury-bound spacecraft launched from Earth must travel over
91 million kilometres (57 million miles) into the Sun's gravitational potential well. Mercury has
an orbital speed of 47.4 km/s (29.5 mi/s), whereas Earth's orbital speed is 29.8 km/s (18.5 mi/s).
[111]
Therefore, the spacecraft must make a larger change in velocity (delta-v) to get to Mercury and
then enter orbit,[186] as compared to the delta-v required for, say, Mars planetary missions.
The potential energy liberated by moving down the Sun's potential well becomes kinetic energy,
requiring a delta-v change to do anything other than pass by Mercury. Some portion of this delta-v
budget can be provided from a gravity assist during one or more fly-bys of Venus.[187] To land safely
or enter a stable orbit the spacecraft would rely entirely on rocket motors. Aerobraking is ruled out
because Mercury has a negligible atmosphere. A trip to Mercury requires more rocket fuel than that
required to escape the Solar System completely. As a result, only three space probes have visited it
so far.[188] A proposed alternative approach would use a solar sail to attain a Mercury-synchronous
orbit around the Sun.[189]
Mariner 10
Main article: Mariner 10