newsarama.com
advertisement


This image taken by Phoenix's Robotic Arm Camera on Sunday, June 29, shows the trench known as "Snow White 5." The trench is about 1.5-to-1.9 inches (4-to-5 centimeters) deep, about 9 inches (24 centimeters) wide and 13 inches (33 centimeters) long. Snow White 5 is located in a patch of Martian soil near the center of a polygonal surface feature, nicknamed "Cheshire Cat." The digging site has been named "Wonderland." Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Max Planck Institute


NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander catches a glimpse of the "Snow White" trenches in the Martian arctic in this image released on June 20, 2008. Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona/Texas A&M University
Phoenix Scrapes Up Water Ice Samples
Mars Lander Scrapes Icy Soil in Wonderland
Minerals Needed for Life Found on Mars
SPECIAL REPORT: Phoenix Mars Lander: Digging for Secrets of Martian Ice

Mars Lander's Next Bake Test Could Be Its Last
By The Associated Press

posted: 03 July 2008
01:51 pm ET

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Phoenix lander's first chemical sniff of Martian soil did not turn up any trace of the building blocks of life. Its next whiff could be its last.

Engineers said a short circuit that occurred last month in one of its test ovens designed to shake and bake minuscule soil samples could happen again when the instrument is turned on.

"Since there is no way to assess the probability of another short circuit occurring, we are taking the most conservative approach and treating the next sample ... as possibly our last," the NASA mission's chief scientist, Peter Smith of the University of Arizona in Tucson, said in a statement Wednesday.

Phoenix, which landed near the Martian north pole on May 25, has eight single-use ovens that heat and analyze Martian soil and ice for signs of organic, or carbon-based, compounds that are essential for life.

The lander delivered its first soil sample scooped up from the surface to one of its ovens last month. The experiment did not yield any ice or organics. Initially, the clumpy dirt could not fit through the oven's opening so scientists vibrated the instrument several days to break it up. Engineers think the short circuit occurred as a result of the repeated shakes.

Scientists want to bake another soil sample mixed with icy bits in another oven next week. Since this could be the last time researchers conduct this experiment, they planned extensive testing on Earth to make sure they can quickly get the icy soil into the oven before the ice evaporates.

Meanwhile, Phoenix's robotic arm was set to sprinkle soil particles taken from a trench dubbed Snow White onto its microscope on Thursday for analysis. If there are leftovers, the rest will be dumped into its wet chemistry lab.

 

 

AstroView 6 EQ Reflector
$419.95
Explore More


















Site Map | News | SpaceFlight | Science | Technology | Entertainment | SpaceViews | NightSky | Ad Astra | SETI | Hot Topics
Image Galleries | Videos | Reader Favorites | Image of the Day | Amazing Images | Wallpapers | Games | Community
about us | FREE Email Newsletter | message boards | register at SPACE.com | contact us | advertise with us | terms & conditions | privacy statement
DMCA/Copyright
  What is This?