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Old Monday, August 6th, 2007
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Default Phoenix rises from ashes of failed missions to search for life on Mars

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Phoenix rises from ashes of failed missions to search for life on Mars

. Probe aims to touch down near planet's north pole
. Craft will dig down into surface and analyse soil



Ian Sample, science correspondent
The Guardian
Saturday August 4 2007

A space probe designed to poke and prod the surface of Mars was set for a dawn launch at Cape Canaveral in Florida this morning, marking the latest chapter in the human quest to find evidence of life beyond Earth.
Fears of heavy rains and thunderstorms delayed the planned launch of the Phoenix Mars mission yesterday, with Nasa officials now hoping for clear skies and takeoff at 5.26am local time today.

The landing craft, a little bigger than a tractor wheel and weighing just 350kg, will be pushed from Earth by 231 tonnes of rocket and nine boosters that will burn kerosene, oxygen and hydrazine over the 10-month trip, which is due to end 122 million miles later in a dusty touchdown on May 25 2008.

Nasa officials hope the $420m Phoenix mission will build on the success of recent Mars landers that saw the twin rovers Spirit and Opportunity touch down in 2004, and exceed all expectations by surviving and surveying the hostile Martian landscape until this day. However, of 35 attempts to reach the planet since 1960, 22 have failed, the majority falling silent en route, burning up on entry, or being dashed to pieces when one glitch or other enforced a harder than foreseen landing.

As the name suggests, Phoenix arises from the embers of previous Mars missions, themselves failed or shelved in 1999 and 2001, but useful in their legacy of spare components and testing know-how, from which Phoenix has been put together. If the launch goes as planned, the Phoenix mission will loop halfway round the sun before embarking on its interplanetary journey, bringing it to the edge of the thin Martian atmosphere at a speed of 12,750 miles per hour.

For the next six and a half minutes, the probe will tear through the atmosphere, a heat shield protecting it from the searing temperatures generated by aerodynamic friction. As it nears the Martian surface, it will release a parachute, slowing its descent further, before finally judging its altitude from the rocky surface and firing thrusters to cushion its impact.

"We've done as much as we can and once we've launched, it's up to the arbitrary factors of the conditions when we arrive," said David Catling, an astrobiologist on the Phoenix team based at Bristol University. "The whole mission takes around 10 years to put together but all of it relies on those final six or so minutes when so many things have to work perfectly," he added.

The area of Mars is the same size as the one third of the Earth that remains uncovered by water. The Phoenix mission aims to touch down in a vast plain thought to be an ancient sea, in an area known as Vastitas Borealis close to the north pole.

Once down, the probe will unfurl petal-like solar panels that soak up the weak sunlight that reaches the fourth rock from the sun. The power will let stereo cameras gaze across the landscape and drive the on-board scientific equipment, built to analyse the atmosphere and examine what lies beneath the surface for signs that the planet was, or is, able to harbour life.

The mission is the first to attempt to dig down into the Martian soil and examine water ice locked beneath. A robotic arm will scoop up fragments from as far as half a metre down and peer at them through a high-resolution microscope. The grains will then be burned in tiny ovens to see what chemicals they release. Mission scientists hope to find carbon compounds, the organics that form the essential building blocks for life. The spacecraft will investigate whether ice close to the surface might melt with changes in the Martian climate, releasing enough water to sustain pockets of primitive microbial life.

From touchdown, the probe will have three months to complete its mission before the Martian winter sets in and light levels are too low to power the lander.

If Nasa officials are forced to delay the launch again, they have two daily launch opportunities until August 24, after which Mars and Earth fall out of alignment, and do not come close again for 26 months.

Colin Pillinger, the Open University planetary scientist and leader of Britain's ill-fated Beagle 2 Mars mission, said: "There are no guarantees going to Mars and everybody in the business knows that for every mission, people have put a lot of their lives into it. This is an exciting time and I wish them every success with it."
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Default Re: Phoenix rises from ashes of failed missions to search for life on Mars

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By Jonathan Amos
Science reporter, BBC News


Nasa says its Phoenix lander on the surface of Mars has gone silent and is almost certainly dead.

Engineers have not heard from the craft since Sunday 2 November when it made a brief communication with Earth.

Phoenix, which landed on the planet's northern plains in May, had been struggling in the increasing cold and dark of an advancing winter.

The US space agency says it will continue to try to contact the craft but does not expect to hear from it.

"We are actually ceasing operations, declaring an end to operations at this point," Phoenix mission project manager Barry Goldstein said at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

"However, since we've been surprised by the robustness of this vehicle, we're going to keep listening. As the orbiters fly overhead every two hours, we'll constantly turn on the radio and try to hail Phoenix to see if it is alive."

Fiery plunge
Launched from Earth in August 2007, the robot arrived on Mars on 25 May, landing further north than any previous mission to the Martian surface.

To make it down, the probe had to survive a fiery plunge through the Red Planet's thin atmosphere, releasing a parachute and using thrusters to control its descent.

Nasa's Lesley Tamppari on the mission’s success

The mission was scheduled to last just three months on the surface, but continued to work for more than five months.

During its ground operations, the robot dug, scooped, baked, sniffed and tasted the Martian soil to test whether it has ever been capable of supporting life.

Phoenix's major achievement was in becoming the first mission to Mars to "touch water" in the form of the water-ice it found just centimetres below the topsoil. Chunks of ice were seen to vaporise before the lander's cameras.

"This was quite a thrill for everybody and it has been the study of that ice that has kept us busy for the last five months," said Phoenix principal investigator Peter Smith of the University of Arizona in Tucson.

"We've excavated that ice, we know its depth, we know how it changes over the surface; we've seen different types of ice."

The spacecraft found the Martian soil to be mildly alkaline, quite different from the acidic soils seen by previous missions to other parts of the planet.

Other key results included the identification in the soil of calcium carbonate, which on Earth is a chief component of limestone rock.
Phoenix also detected sheet-like particles, which were probably clays of some kind.

The significance of both minerals is that they form only in the presence of liquid water - which could have supported life.

The lander also detected perchlorate (an ion containing chlorine and oxygen) which is an oxidising chemical and, on Earth, can sustain some microbes.

perhaps the key achievement has been to touch the water-ice in the soil

Phoenix even recorded snowfall; and took more than 25,000 pictures, from the panoramas of its Arctic landing site to the atomic scale images of dust grains delivered to its microscope.

"Right now at this epoch in Martian history it is certainly too cold for organisms to be alive, certainly in the sense of Earth organisms," said Peter Smith.

"But we do think that over time as the Mars climate changes that it can get warm enough that, perhaps, we are getting at least films of liquid water or dampness in the soil; and that could create an environment where life could exist. That would be in the last few million years; very recent in Mars history."

The Phoenix mission scientists have a mass of data that will keep them busy for decades. They have not yet given up hope of seeing a signature in the data for organics, the carbon-rich molecules that can be considered the "feedstock" of biochemistry.

One disappointment, however, from the final days of the mission was the failure to get a microphone on the lander to work. This would have returned the first sounds of Mars.

Overall, though, the US space agency is delighted with the achievements of the mission.

"This is an Irish wake rather than a funeral," commented Doug McCuistion, director of the Mars exploration programme at Nasa Headquarters in Washington DC.

"We should celebrate what Phoenix and the Phoenix team has done and where it is going to take us in the future. [There were] a lot of lessons learned in this mission for us that will feed forward to future missions. We learned a lot about handling of soils, soil consistency, and how difficult it can be."

Cracking up
Phoenix was never expected to be a long mission. At its high latitude (68 degrees North), it was always destined to be starved of light as the Arctic winter deepened.

In the end, though, the demise of Phoenix was hastened by a dust storm which obscured the Sun's precious rays still further.

With so little energy getting into its solar panels, the batteries on Phoenix were regularly going flat, preventing the robot from heating its systems in temperatures that were heading down to minus 100C.

Nevertheless, Nasa says its Mars Reconnaissance and Odyssey satellites will continue to listen for Phoenix for a further three weeks, until Solar Conjunction, when Mars moves behind the Sun as viewed from Earth.

The probe has sent back more than 25,000 pictures

As winter progresses, Phoenix will be covered in a thick layer of carbon dioxide frost. As the ice builds up on the solar arrays, they are likely to crack and fall off. The electronics will also break up in the cold that could see temperatures go down to minus 180C.
BBC
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