| on 02-06-2008 18:06 |
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Ice on Mars? (Nasa/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona)
The descent engine blew away soil on landing, possibly revealing ice
Nasa's new robotic craft on Mars may be resting on a large patch of ice.
The latest images sent to Earth reveal tantalising glimpses of what looks like frozen water.
Scientists think the Phoenix Mars lander's descent engine may have blown away a layer of dirt, exposing the ice.
Nasa's new robotic craft on Mars may be resting on a large patch of ice.
The latest images sent to Earth reveal tantalising glimpses of what looks like frozen water.
Scientists think the Phoenix Mars lander's descent engine may have blown away a layer of dirt, exposing the ice.
The craft's robotic arm reached out and touched the soil for the first
time, leaving behind a striking, footprint-like impression, they said
on Sunday.
The robotic arm was making a test run, just one week after the landing.
"This first touch allows us to utilise the robotic arm accurately,"
said David Spencer, Phoenix's surface mission manager at Nasa's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.
"We are in a good situation" for future testing, he said.
The spacecraft, which has its own laboratory onboard, will soon start digging for soil and ice.
Any dirt and ice it scoops up will be shovelled into several small
ovens to be heated. The resulting gases will be analysed by various
instruments.
The mission's main goal is to investigate the planet's geological history and search for the chemical building blocks of life.
It is being led by the University of Arizona in Tucson, and managed by JPL.
I think a number of our readers will be looking at above image and wondering "Is That Ice?", Maybe the liitle bot landed on something a little larger and not so organic!
Or
Maybe under that flat waste land is a frozen ocean?
Last update: 02-06-2008 18:40
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