Jun 4, 2008 7:28 pm US/Pacific
Glitch Delays Phoenix Lander's Mars Dig
LOS ANGELES (AP) ―
-
-
Surface features in the area surrounding the Phoenix lander on Mars. (File)
CBS
The Phoenix lander's first dig into the Martian soil
for scientific study was delayed Wednesday because of a communications
glitch on a spacecraft that relays commands from Earth to the red
planet.
The orbiting Odyssey satellite went into safe mode and failed to
send instructions to Phoenix to claw into the permafrost to search for
evidence of the building blocks of life, said Chad Edwards, chief
telecommunications engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena.
It's the second time a relay problem has delayed the lander's
schedule. The first glitch occurred two days after it landed, when
another satellite, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, turned off its
radio.
Engineers worked to fix the problem with Odyssey, which will remain
offline until Saturday, Edwards said. A preliminary investigation
revealed the safe mode was probably triggered by high-energy particles
from space interrupting the satellite's computer memory.
"The lander is fine," Edwards said.
Phoenix set down in Mars' northern latitudes to study whether the
polar environment is capable of supporting primitive life. It
communicates with Earth through Odyssey and the Reconnaissance Orbiter,
which make daily passes over the lander to send commands and beam back
images.
With Odyssey temporarily out of service, engineers told the
Reconnaissance Orbiter to be the middleman between the lander and
Earth.
Phoenix had planned to dig the first of three shallow pits north of
where it landed and dump the dirt into a tiny oven, where it will be
baked and studied this week. The earliest the lander can start the
excavation will be Thursday, when new commands will be sent up.
The green light to scrape the Martian surface came after an
extensive check of Phoenix's 8-foot robotic arm and other scientific
instruments.
"It's absolutely an incredibly science-rich location," said chief
scientist Peter Smith of the University of Arizona, Tucson, who heads
the three-month, $420 million mission.
Before the actual work, Phoenix had playtime in the Martian dirt,
doing two practice runs that involved scooping up and then dumping out
fistfuls of soil. The tests yielded an intriguing scientific find: In
both cases, the loose soil was mixed with white bits that scientists
believe are either surface ice or salt deposits.
Phoenix zeroed in on three sites to the right of the test dig area
that scientists have playfully named Baby Bear, Mama Bear and Papa
Bear, after the "Goldilocks" fairy tale.
For the initial dig, scientists want the lander to cut into the
Baby Bear site at an angle, dig three-tenths of an inch into the
permafrost and drag the dirt into the arm's scoop like a backhoe.
Then Phoenix will swing its robotic arm 90 degrees and wait for
further instructions to drop the scoopful of dirt into a miniature oven
designed to heat the sample and analyze the vapors for traces of
organic compounds, said Ashitey Trebi-Ollennu, a robotic arm engineer
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Although the oven's spring-loaded doors did not fully open as
scientists hoped, Smith said it should not be a problem. Over the next
several days, Phoenix will scoop up soil from the other two sites for
its microscope and wet chemistry lab to analyze.
Phoenix cannot detect fossils or living microbes. Instead, it will
poke into the soil and ice to study whether liquid water ever existed
and whether there are any organic compounds, those containing carbon
and hydrogen atoms. Scientists generally agree that water, organics and
a heat source are needed for a habitable environment.
Twin rovers that have been roaming near the Martian equator since
2004 have uncovered evidence that water once flowed at or near the
surface of ancient Mars.
"We're just taking an exploratory step here," Smith said this week.
"Our instruments are not designed to decode DNA molecules. ... We're
looking for the basic ingredients that would allow life to prosper in
this environment."
(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
Comments