The return trip has been a long time in the making because Mercury is a tough target. It orbits just 36 million miles from the sun, where intense solar gravity makes spacecraft visits difficult, and fierce heat challenges spacecraft designers. The $286 million Messenger spacecraft, set for launch in 2004, will benefit from a sun-blocking parasol and a loopy path that will fly it several times by Venus and Mercury and then ease it into orbit around Mercury in 2009.
Once there, Messenger will study Mercury's strangely dense interior and strong magnetic field, reminiscent of Earth's. The probe will also look for ice at Mercury's poles, where shadowed craters remain frigid even when equatorial temperatures soar to 800 degrees Fahrenheit. "Mercury gives us the best chance to learn why Earth is unlike Mars and Venus, why our planet is special," says Sean Solomon of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., who leads the mission. ------------------------------------------------------------------------


