The impact was powerful enough to generate seismic waves both down to the planet's core and across its crust horizontally, making it possible to study Mars' internal structure -- revealing that the crust on which InSight sits is less dense than the crust the waves traveled over from the crater site.
The end of InSight's mission -- which recorded more than 1,300 marsquakes in total -- could come in the next couple of months, according to Bruce Banerdt of NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, due to the expected accumulation of dust on the lander's solar power panel.
It's "sad," he said, while celebrating that the probe worked "marvelously" for four years.