Published: 12:23PM Wednesday May 14, 2008
Source: Reuters
Nine months ago, NASA's Phoenix probe blasted off for Mars with
an unprecedented mission to sample water on another world.
Before that can happen, however, the space agency faces a
formidable challenge: landing.
The odds are not great. Historically, 55% of all attempts to land
on Mars have failed and the method being used for the touchdown of
the Phoenix spacecraft on May 25 has not been attempted in 32
years.
"This is no trip to grandma's for the weekend," Ed Weiler, NASA's
associate administrator for space science, said during a news
conference.
After a nearly glitch-free ride, Phoenix is scheduled to settle
near Mars' north pole at 7:36 PM EDT (11:36 AM NZ), but no one will
know whether it succeeded until about 15 minutes later.
That's how long it will take radio signals, travelling at light
speed, to reach Earth, 276 million km away.
Rather than using airbags to cushion and bounce to a stop like the
twin Mars exploration rovers Spirit and Opportunity, Phoenix is
equipped with steering rockets to descend more precisely on
target.
A propulsive landing system also is better suited to the heavier
spacecraft that NASA would need to support eventual human
expeditions on Mars.
NASA tried a rocket-powered descent on a probe called Mars Polar
Lander in 1999.
The mission came to an abrupt end during the final approach and
landing. What went wrong remains a mystery.
"They've done everything they can do to make this a success, but
Mars has been known to cause trouble," Weiler said.
NASA used a similar landing system for its twin Mars Viking probes
in the 1970s.
Five of six successful
Phoenix will be the sixth lander the United States has sent to
Mars, five of which touched down successfully.
The statistic does little to allay the anxiety of Phoenix flight
controllers, who will be stationed at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, California, to await the news from
Mars.
The worst part will be what project manager Barry Goldstein calls
the seven minutes of terror - the high-speed ride through the
planet's thin atmosphere and the landing on the Martian equivalent
of northern Alaska.
During those minutes, Phoenix will enter Mars' atmosphere zooming
along at 20,160 kph relative to the planet, then dissipate most of
its speed and come to screeching halt.
If everything works properly, the spacecraft will come to rest on a
relatively rock-free and smooth area directly on top of a ice-rich
bed of soil.
During the three-month mission, Phoenix is to sample the soil
and ice to determine if conditions were suitable for life to take
hold.
Phoenix has a 2.3-metre robotic arm to bore down into the ground
and retrieve samples for analysis.
Its suite of science instruments includes small ovens to melt
the ice and spectrometers detect a variety of gases.
While not specifically designed to detect life, Phoenix should be
able if Mars has or had the right stuff to support it.
"My greatest hope," said lead scientist Peter Smith, with the
University of Arizona in Tucson, "is that we'll change the
direction of Mars exploration."
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