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Phoenix
Mars Lander Status Report: Radar and Other Gear Pass Checkouts
Sept. 04, 2007
Artist
concept of Phoenix in space.
Credit:
NASA/JPL.
Two crucial tools for a
successful landing of America's latest mission to Mars, the radar
and UHF radio on NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander, have passed
in-flight checkouts.
The ultra-high-frequency radio won't
be turned on again until landing day, May 25, 2008, when it will
relay communications from Phoenix to orbiters already in service
around Mars. Since launch on Aug. 4, 2007, and until the day it
reaches Mars, Phoenix is communicating directly with Earth via
even higher frequency X-band radio, mounted on a part of the
spacecraft that will be jettisoned shortly before Phoenix hits
the top of the Martian atmosphere.
The radar will monitor
the spacecraft's fast-shrinking distance to the ground during the
final three minutes before touchdown on Mars, triggering
descent-engine firings and other necessary events during the most
challenging moments of the mission.
The Phoenix flight
operations team tested the radar and UHF radio on Aug. 24. Four
days earlier, the team ran the first in-flight checkout of a
Phoenix science instrument. This test focused on the Thermal and
Evolved-Gas Analyzer, which will check for water,
carbon-containing molecules and other chemicals of interest in
the icy soil of Mars. The checkout verified the health of an ion
pump, which will be used during the transit to Mars to remove
most water vapor carried from Earth with the instrument. Four
additional science instruments are scheduled for checkouts before
the spacecraft's next trajectory correction maneuver, planned for
Oct. 16.
As of Sept. 1, Phoenix will have covered 81
million kilometers (50 million miles) of its 679-million
kilometer (422-million-mile) flight to Mars. It is traveling at
34 kilometers per second (76,000 mph) in relation to the sun.
Meanwhile, careful preparations continue for the white-knuckle
minutes before landing and the potential scientific discoveries
at the landing site.
"Everything is going as
planned. No surprises, but this is one of those times when boring
is good," said Barry Goldstein, Phoenix project manager at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Phoenix
will fly to a site farther north than any previous Mars landing.
The solar-powered lander will robotically dig to underground ice
and will run laboratory tests assessing whether the site could
have ever been hospitable to microbial life. The instruments will
also look for clues about the history of the water in the ice.
They will monitor arctic weather as northern Mars' summer
progresses toward fall, until solar energy fades and the mission
ends.
The Phoenix mission is led by Peter Smith of the
University of Arizona, Tucson, with project management at JPL and
development partnership at Lockheed Martin, Denver. International
contributions are provided by the Canadian Space Agency; the
University of Neuchatel, Switzerland; the universities of
Copenhagen and Aarhus, Denmark; the Max Planck Institute,
Germany; and the Finnish Meteorological Institute. JPL is a
division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
Source:
NASA

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