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Phoenix Lands On Mars For First Polar Mission

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    Washington (AFP) May 25, 2008
    An ambitious effort to determine whether Mars' arctic region was ever habitable for microbial forms of life got underway Sunday when NASA landed the Phoenix probe near the Red Planet's north pole.

    After a nine-month journey from Earth, Phoenix managed an almost perfect landing in a relatively rock-free, flat target area, said Barry Goldstein, Phoenix project manager at the mission's control center at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

    The Mars Phoenix Lander had to deploy a parachute and then thrusters to brake in a tense seven minutes from 20,400 kilometers per hour (12,700 miles per hour) to manage a soft landing on its three legs.

    "Frankly, this was by far the hardest part," Goldstein said on NASA TV. "In my dreams it couldn't have gone as perfectly as it did tonight."

    Working in the flat circumpolar region known as Vastitas Borealis -- akin to northern Canada in Earth's latitude -- Phoenix, with a panoply of high-tech equipment, will over three months dig below the surface to probe the icy ground for signs of liquid water and organic, life-supporting minerals.

    Given that Mars' polar region is subject to Earth-like seasonal changes, the scientists think that, like on Earth, the Martian arctic might have a geological record of a warmer, habitable climate.

    "Our whole mission is about digging," said Peter Smith, Phoenix principal investigator at the University of Arizona, before the landing.

    "We find that the arctic region is really sensitive to climate change on a planet ... it also preserves the history of life," he said.

    "We think that organics must have existed at least at one time" from meteorite and other impacts, he said. The presence of liquid water and organics would signify a "habitable zone," he said.

    The team had been worried about the high risk of the project, with a roughly 50 percent failure rate on all Mars missions since the Soviet Union launched the first one in 1960.

    Smith said the landing went without a hitch.

    "This team performed perfectly, they couldn't have done a better job," he said on NASA TV.

    But NASA will only know for certain that Phoenix's equipment deployed as planned after pictures from the probe reach the Earth via NASA's Odyssey Mars orbiter, starting from about two hours after the landing.

    "Those pictures will be well worth it... We have to make sure that the spacecraft is healthy," said Smith.

    The first pictures will be of the craft itself, to show NASA if all the equipment deployed in working order, and then, possibly shots of the surface.

    Phoenix is equipped with a backhoe-like robotic arm, 2.35 meters (7.7 feet) long, designed to dig trenches up to one meter (three feet) deep for samples of soil and water ice.

    The arm will deliver the samples to instruments aboard the lander for detailed chemical and geological analysis.

    The robotic arm also carries a box-shaped camera with a double Gauss lens system like that in 35mm cameras, and two lighting assemblies.

    This will take images of the surrounding area and of samples the arm picks up.

    Another camera device is the surface stereo imager, what NASA calls Phoenix's "eyes." Sitting two meters (6.6 feet) above the ground, the SSI will produce high-definition and panoramic images of the surrounding landscape.

    Its stereo capability will help give scientists on Earth three-dimensional views of the work the robotic arm does. It can also be turned vertically to take images that will provide information on atmospheric particles.

    Also deployed is a Canadian-built meteorological station to study the Mars atmosphere.

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    Phoenix Spacecraft Reports Good Health After Mars Landing
    Pasadena CA (SPX) May 26, 2008
    A NASA spacecraft today sent pictures showing itself in good condition after making the first successful landing in a polar region of Mars. The images from NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander also provided a glimpse of the flat valley floor expected to have water-rich permafrost within reach of the lander's robotic arm.









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