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Spacecraft
at Mars Prepare to Welcome New Kid on the Block
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Hi-Res
Version
Phoenix
Mars Lander
This
artist's concept depicts NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander a moment
before its planned touchdown on the arctic plains of Mars in
May 2008.
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Credit:
NASA/JPL-Calech/University of Arizona
Three Mars spacecraft are
adjusting their orbits to be over the right place at the right
time to listen to NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander as it enters the
Martian atmosphere on May 25.
Every landing on Mars is
difficult. Having three orbiters track Phoenix as it streaks
through Mars' atmosphere will set a new standard for coverage of
critical events during a robotic landing. The data stream from
Phoenix will be relayed to Earth throughout the spacecraft's
entry, descent and landing events. If all goes well, the flow of
information will continue for one minute after touchdown.
"We
will have diagnostic information from the top of the atmosphere
to the ground that will give us insight into the landing
sequence," said David Spencer of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., deputy project manager for the
Phoenix Mars Lander project. This information would be valuable
in the event of a problem with the landing and has the potential
to benefit the design of future landers.
Bob Mase,
mission manager at JPL for NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter, said, "We
have been precisely managing the trajectory to position Odyssey
overhead when Phoenix arrives, to ensure we are ready for
communications. Without those adjustments, we would be almost
exactly on the opposite side of the planet when Phoenix arrives."
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is making adjustments
in bigger increments, with one firing of thrusters on Feb. 6 and
at least one more planned in April. The European Space Agency's
Mars Express orbiter has also maneuvered to be in place to record
transmissions from Phoenix during the landing. Even the NASA
rovers Spirit and Opportunity have been aiding preparations,
simulating transmissions from Phoenix for tests with the
orbiters.
Launched on Aug. 4, 2007, Phoenix will land
farther north than any previous mission to Mars, at a site
expected to have frozen water mixed with soil just below the
surface. The lander will use a robotic arm to put samples of soil
and ice into laboratory instruments. One goal is to study whether
the site has ever had conditions favorable for supporting
microbial life.
Phoenix will hit the top of the Martian
atmosphere at 5.7 kilometers per second (12,750 miles per hour).
In the next seven minutes, it will use heat-shield friction, a
parachute, then descent rockets to slow to about 2.4 meters per
second (5.4 mph) before landing on three legs.
Odyssey
will tilt from its normally downward-looking orientation to turn
its ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) antenna toward the descending
Phoenix. As Odyssey receives a stream of information from
Phoenix, it will immediately relay the stream to Earth with a
more capable high-gain antenna. The other two orbiters, Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Express, will record
transmissions from Phoenix during the descent, as backup to
ensure that all data is captured, then transmit the whole files
to Earth after the landing. "We will begin recording about
10 minutes before the landing," said JPL's Ben Jai, mission
manager for Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
The orbiters'
advance support for the Phoenix mission also includes examination
of potential landing sites, which is continuing. After landing,
the support will include relaying communication between Phoenix
and Earth during the three months that Phoenix is scheduled to
operate on the surface. Additionally, NASA and European Space
Agency ground stations are performing measurements to determine
the trajectory of Phoenix with high precision.
With about
160 million kilometers (100 million miles) still to fly as of
late February, Phoenix continues to carry out testing and other
preparations of its instruments. The pressure and temperature
sensors of the meteorological station provided by the Canadian
Space Agency were calibrated Feb. 27 for the final time before
landing. "The spacecraft has been behaving so well that we
have been able to focus much of the team's attention on
preparations for landing and surface operations," Spencer
said.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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