Monday, January 18, 2010

UPDATE: Phoenix Mars Lander - NASA will search for three days

NASA to search for silent Mars lander
By Associated Press

POSTED: 02:58 p.m. EST, Jan 17, 2010

LOS ANGELES: Will Phoenix rise from the dead?
Despite the odds, NASA on Monday will begin a three-day effort to listen for signs of life from the Phoenix lander, presumed frozen to death near Mars' north pole after spending five months digging into soil and ice.
''We have no expectations that Phoenix has survived the winter, but we certainly want to have a look,'' said Chad Edwards, chief telecommunications engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
The plan calls for the orbiting Mars Odyssey spacecraft to make regular passes over the Phoenix landing site and listen for a beep. If the three-legged, solar-powered lander fails to phone home, NASA will hail it again next month, when the sun is higher on the horizon.
Phoenix landed in May 2008 and spent five months digging trenches and conducting science experiments in the arctic plains. It confirmed the presence of ice and became the first spacecraft to touch and taste water on another planet. It last communicated with Earth in November 2008 as sunlight waned and temperatures dipped.
The lander was not designed to withstand extreme Martian winters, where temperatures average minus 195 degrees, far chillier than Earth's coldest temperature — minus 129 degrees — recorded in Antarctica in 1983.
Since seasons on Mars last twice as long as Earth's, scientists waited until Martian spring was under way in the northern latitudes to check on Phoenix, which has been blanketed in carbon dioxide frost.
In the unlikely chance the lander wakes up, it has been programmed to signal that it is alive.
''It's such a low probability,'' admitted mission scientist Ray Arvidson of Washington University in St. Louis.
It's doubtful Phoenix's solar panels can capture enough sunlight to charge its batteries. Even if it re-energizes itself, there's no guarantee its instruments will still work, researchers say.
Because the mission was pieced together with hardware and instruments intended for canceled projects, Phoenix was named for the mythical bird that rose from its own ashes.

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