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PICTURE OF THE WEEK: Nasa Launch
NASA Readies Mars Lander for August Launch to Icy Site
WASHINGTON, July 9 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- NASA's next Mars mission
will look beneath a frigid arctic landscape for conditions favorable to
past or present life.
Instead of roving to hills or craters, NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander will
claw down into the icy soil of the Red Planet's northern plains. The robot
will investigate whether frozen water near the Martian surface might
periodically melt enough to sustain a livable environment for microbes. To
accomplish that and other key goals, Phoenix will carry a set of advanced
research tools never before used on Mars.
First, however, it must launch from Florida during a three-week period
beginning Aug. 3, then survive a risky descent and landing on Mars next
spring.
"Our 'follow the water' strategy for exploring Mars has yielded a
string of dramatic discoveries in recent years about the history of water
on a planet where similarities with Earth were much greater in the past
than they are today," said Doug McCuistion, director of the Mars
Exploration Program at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "Phoenix will
complement our strategic exploration of Mars by being our first attempt to
actually touch and analyze Martian water -- water in the form of buried
ice."
NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter found evidence in 2002 to support theories
that large areas of Mars, including the arctic plains, have water ice
within an arm's reach of the surface.
"Phoenix has been designed to examine the history of the ice by
measuring how liquid water has modified the chemistry and mineralogy of the
soil," said Peter Smith, the Phoenix principal investigator at the
University of Arizona, Tucson.
"In addition, our instruments can assess whether this polar environment
is a habitable zone for primitive microbes. To complete the scientific
characterization of the site, Phoenix will monitor polar weather and the
interaction of the atmosphere with the surface."
With its flanking solar panels unfurled, the lander is about 18 feet
wide and 5 feet long. A robotic arm 7.7 feet long will dig to the icy
layer, which is expected to lie within a few inches of the surface. A
camera and conductivity probe on the arm will examine soil and any ice
there. The arm will lift samples to two instruments on the lander's deck.
One will use heating to check for volatile substances, such as water and
carbon-based chemicals that are essential building blocks for life. The
other will analyze the chemistry of the soil.
A meteorology station, with a laser for assessing water and dust in the
atmosphere, will monitor weather throughout the planned three-month mission
during Martian spring and summer. The robot's toolkit also includes a mast-
mounted stereo camera to survey the landing site, a descent camera to see
the site in broader context and two microscopes.
For the final stage of landing, Phoenix is equipped with a pulsed
thruster method of deceleration. The system uses an ultra-lightweight
landing system that allows the spacecraft to carry a heavier scientific
payload. Like past Mars missions, Phoenix uses a heat shield to slow its
high-speed entry, followed by a supersonic parachute that further reduces
its speed to about 135 mph. The lander then separates from the parachute
and fires pulsed descent rocket engines to slow to about 5.5 mph before
landing on its three legs.
"Landing safely on Mars is difficult no matter what method you use,"
said Barry Goldstein, the project manager for Phoenix at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "Our team has been testing the
system relentlessly since 2003 to identify and address whatever
vulnerabilities may exist."
Researchers evaluating possible landing sites have used observations
from Mars orbiters to find the safest places where the mission's goals can
be met. The leading candidate site is a broad valley with few boulders at a
latitude equivalent to northern Alaska.
Smith leads the Phoenix mission, with project management at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory and the development partnership located at Lockheed
Martin, Denver. International contributions are provided by the Canadian
Space Agency, the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland, the University of
Copenhagen, Denmark, the Max Planck Institute, Germany, and the Finnish
Meteorological Institute. Additional information on the Phoenix mission is
available online at:
http://www.nasa.gov/phoenix
Additional information on NASA's Mars program is available online at:
http://www.nasa.gov/mars
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