Space Travel News  
Phoenix Lands On Mars

  • Desktop available - 1024x768 - 1280 x 1024 and 1360 x 768
  • Click for live images at LPL
  • by Staff Writers
    Pasadena CA (AFP) May 25, 2008
    NASA's Phoenix spacecraft successfully landed on Mars' frigid north pole region late Sunday in a risk-fraught mission to search for signs of habitability, the US space agency said.

    "Phoenix has landed," a NASA official said as the safe touchdown was confirmed.

    Images from the landing zone will hopefully be available in about two hours. This is the first successful rocket landing on Mars since 1976.

    The Mars Phoenix Lander successfully deployed 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.

    Mission officials at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, were seen on television cheering and giving each other hugs and high-fives after signals sent back from the craft confirmed the arrival of the first spacecraft ever to land on the Martian arctic.

    The 420-million-dollar spacecraft is designed to help scientists assess whether the Martian arctic has ever had conditions favorable to microbial life.

    Given that Mars' polar region is subject to Earth-like seasonal changes, the scientists are looking to see whether there is a point where the region warms and changes into a water-rich soil with organic, life-supporting minerals.

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

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

    Phoenix managed an almost perfect landing in a relatively rock-free, flat target area in the flat circumpolar region known as Vastitas Borealis -- akin to northern Canada in Earth's latitude, according to Barry Goldstein, Phoenix project manager at JPL.

    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 Russians launched the first one in 1960.

    "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."

    NASA will only know that the landing and deployment of Phoenix's equipment went well after pictures from the probe reach the Earth via NASA's Odyssey Mars orbiter, two hours after the landing.

    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 camera and a 2.35-meter (7.7-foot) robotic arm that can dig as deep as one meter to find ice, and can heat up samples to detect carbon and hydrogen molecules, essential elements of life.

    It also has meteorological equipment to study the Mars atmosphere.

    Related Links
    Phoenix at NASA
    Phoenix at APL
    Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
    Lunar Dreams and more



    Memory Foam Mattress Review
    Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
    XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


    Phoenix Spacecraft On Course For May 25 Mars Landing
    Pasadena CA (SPX) May 23, 2008
    With three days and 3 million miles left to fly before arriving at Mars, NASA's Phoenix spacecraft is on track for its destination in the Martian arctic.







  • North Carolina Students Win National Team America Rocketry Challenge
  • NASA Successfully Completes First Series Of Ares Engine Tests
  • NASA Awards Contract For Ares I Mobile Launcher
  • Russia's Energomash To Double Production Of Rocket Engines

  • Arianespace Completes The Assembly Of Another Ariane 5
  • Zenit Rocket Powers A Successful Sea Launch Campaign
  • Sea Launch Initiates Countdown For Launch Of Galaxy 18
  • Sweden Launches MASER 11 Sounding Rocket

  • NASA gives go-ahead for Discovery shuttle launch on May 31
  • Discovery's Launch Date Confirmed: May 31
  • STS-124 Astronauts Wrap Up Launch Rehearsal
  • Discovery's Payloads Installed

  • NASA: Space station view is good this week
  • NASA TV Airs High-Def Day In The Life Of An ISS Astronaut
  • Russian cargo ship docks with the ISS: report
  • MDA Receives Information Solution Contract With Boeing

  • Subcommittee Passes NASA Authorization Act
  • Why Do Astronauts Suffer From Space Sickness
  • ESA And Space Tourism
  • NASA's 50th birthday marked in art exhibit

  • Suits For Shenzhou
  • China Launches New Space Tracking Ship To Serve Shenzhou VII
  • Three Rocketeers For Shenzhou
  • China's space development can pose military threat: Japan

  • Robot conducts Detroit orchestra
  • Canada rejects sale of space firm to US defense firm
  • The Future Of Robotic Warfare Part Two
  • Robot anaesthetist developed in France: doctor

  • Phoenix Lands On Mars
  • Foot-Dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-Like Hot Spring Deposits
  • Phoenix Set To Rise Tomorrow For A Busy 90 Days On Mars
  • Mars Express Support To Phoenix Landing

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement