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Mercury鈥檚 Mysteries
Exploring the first planet from the Sun

data the MESSENGER spacecraft collected, is of Mercury鈥檚 north polar region. Areas shown in red are sunlit and reach temperatures of greater than 400 Kelvin (260 degrees Fahrenheit); craters shown in purple remain permanently in shadow and can have temperatures as low as 50 Kelvin (minus 370 degrees Fahrenheit).
Steven Hauck was helping analyze data from NASA鈥檚 MESSENGER mission a decade ago when scientists discovered what he still considers 鈥渙ne of the coolest things that we found.鈥
That four-year orbiting trip around Mercury revealed a surface pocked with features found nowhere else and reminiscent of Swiss cheese. Dubbed 鈥渉ollows,鈥 they occur when rocks turn to gas and disappear into space.
Determining what type of minerals might do that and how common they are 鈥渨ill be important for understanding what Mercury鈥檚 crust was made of right after the planet formed,鈥 said Hauck, PhD, a professor and chair of the Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences at 星空传媒. Hauck has spent his career studying the mysteries of Mercury, as well as the evolution of other planetary bodies鈥 interiors and surfaces.

Steven Hauck
He鈥檚 also chair of NASA鈥檚 Mercury Exploration Assessment Group, a scientific advisory panel, and has participated in two studies that examined the feasibility of NASA someday setting a spacecraft on the planet.
Studying Mercury and other planets has value beyond better understanding a single celestial orb, Hauck said. 鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 so different in many ways from the other planets,鈥 he said, Mercury 鈥済ives us an opportunity to really test our ideas about how planets work.鈥
Hauck recently shared some of his favorite facts about the planet closest to the Sun:
1. Mercury experiences double sunrises and double sunsets because it spins on its axis twice for every three rotations around the sun.
2. It has shrunk by 5陆 miles over about 4 billion years. Other planets don鈥檛 show this level of shrinkage, although Hauck says phenomena such as the global shifting of continents through plate tectonics make it difficult to record shrinkage on Earth.
3. Mercury has the widest temperature variations from hot to cold—about 600 degrees—of any planet in the solar system. That鈥檚 thanks to the combination of the planet鈥檚 long solar day, its proximity to the sun and its negligible atmosphere.
4. Mercury doesn鈥檛 experience seasons because the tilt of its rotational axis is nearly zero, where the tilt of the Earth鈥檚 axis that gives us our seasons—when regions are pointed toward or away from the sun—is 23.5 degrees.
5. Although Mercury is the closest planet to the sun, it has ice in permanently shaded areas by its poles, which are some of the coldest places in the inner solar system and can reach minus 370 degrees Fahrenheit.