The European Space Agency is launching a spacecraft to explore the mysteries of Mercury. BepiColombo, named after the Italian mathematician and engineer Giuseppe “Bepi” Colombo, is set to launch at 9:45 p.m. ET Friday aboard an Ariane 5 rocket from a spaceport in French Guiana. The launch will be livestreamed via ESA’s website. NPR reports: The spacecraft is actually made up of two probes: One will go into orbit close to the planet, while the other, supplied by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, will orbit farther away, measuring Mercury’s magnetic field. “What this lets you do is look at that space environment around Mercury from two different perspectives at exactly the same time,” says Nancy Chabot, a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. That gives a clearer picture of what’s changing during the 88 days it takes Mercury to make one revolution around the sun.

Radar measurements from Earth first suggested that there was ice on Mercury. Earlier this decade, NASA’s Messenger mission was able to confirm that the ice was actually there. But Messenger only came close enough to see the ice at Mercury’s north pole. The real icy action, Chabot says, is at the south pole. “The largest crater to host these water ice deposits is right smack dab at the south pole of Mercury,” she says. “And so I’m very excited that BepiColombo is going to be in an orbit that passes much closer to the southern hemisphere.” BepiColombo will take a rather circuitous path to Mercury. It will fly by Earth once, Venus twice and Mercury six times before it is in the right orientation to go into orbit around the innermost planet in our solar system. The entire trip will take slightly more than seven years. When BepiColombo gets into orbit, it may be able to see where Messenger crash-landed on the planet. It is estimated to have made a crater about 60 feet across.

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