Mars Lander Scientists to Try Last Soil Shake


(AP Photo/NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Texas A&M) :: In this image provided by NASA the Phoenix Mars Lander used its Robotic Arm during the mission's 15th Martian day since landing Monday June 9, 2008 to test a "sprinkle" method for delivering small samples of soil to instruments on the lander deck. Scientists troubleshooting the Phoenix lander said Monday they will try one last shake to get a scoopful of Martian dirt inside a tiny oven in hopes of jump-starting their study of Mars' north pole region. Phoenix's first science experiment to heat the permafrost soil was delayed after it was discovered that virtually none of it passed through a screen to reach a miniature oven, one of eight aboard the spacecraft that will heat soil and sniff the resulting vapors for signs of life-friendly elements.


Updated: 6/11/2008

LOS ANGELES

Scientists troubleshooting the Phoenix lander said Monday they will try one last shake to get a scoopful of Martian dirt inside a tiny oven in hopes of jump-starting their study of Mars' north pole region.

Phoenix's first science experiment to heat the permafrost soil was delayed after it was discovered that virtually none of it passed through a screen to reach a miniature oven, one of eight aboard the spacecraft that will heat soil and sniff the resulting vapors for signs of life-friendly elements.

''This soil is very cohesive and it's very hard for it to get through the screen,'' said mission scientist William Boynton of the University of Arizona in Tucson, who is in charge of the oven experiment.

If shaking the oven doesn't work, scientists will try sprinkling dirt through the opening of a new oven or using the lander's 8-foot robotic arm to grind up the dirt first.

It's the biggest challenge faced by Phoenix so far since landing in the Martian arctic on May 25 on a three-month mission to study whether the environment could be habitable for alien life.

Boyton said he was initially more concerned that the robot wouldn't collect enough soil, not its density.

''To be honest, we never thought it would be working so well that we'd have to worry about a riches of just too much,'' he said. ''Now that we see the nature of that soil ... we really are much better off with very small amounts of soil.''

Phoenix's single-use ovens are among several instruments that will probe whether the Martian northern plain has the chemical building blocks of life. The lander cannot directly detect fossils or living things.

In the meantime, Phoenix grabbed another scoopful of soil and planned to deliver it to its microscope later this week.

———

On the Net:

Phoenix Mars: http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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