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One of the first color images from the
Phoenix Mars Lander shows the surface of Mars after the Phoenix Mars
Lander spacecraft landed successfully in the first-ever touchdown near
Mars' north pole May 25, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
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One of the first color images from the
Phoenix Mars Lander shows the surface of Mars after the Phoenix Mars
Lander spacecraft landed successfully in the first-ever touchdown near
Mars' north pole May 25, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, May 27 (Xinhuanet) -- In the most ambitious
mission to date to find life-sustaining minerals on the Red Planet, NASA's
Phoenix Mars probe sent back never-before-seen pictures of Mars' north pole
Monday, media reported Tuesday.
The pictures from the probe confirmed that the solar
arrays needed for the mission's energy supply had unfolded properly, as the
craft's batteries would have run out in about 30 hours.
The photos also showed masts for the stereo camera
and weather station had swung into vertical position as planned, and showed the
spacecraft's footpad planted on the dusty surface as well as polygonal patterns
on the ground that looked similar to icy arctic regions on Earth.
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One of the first images from the Phoenix
Mars Lander shows the surface of Mars after the Phoenix Mars Lander
spacecraft landed successfully in the first-ever touchdown near Mars'
north pole May 25. (Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
The flat Martian valley floor is expected to have
water-rich permafrost within reach of the lander's robotic arm.
"We can see cracks in the troughs that make us think
the ice is still modifying the surface," said Peter Smith, a lead scientist on
the project. "We see fresh cracks. Cracks can't be old. They would fill in," he
said.
"I'm floored. I'm absolutely floored," said Phoenix
Project manager Barry Goldstein of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
California, as he reviewed the dramatic images.
(Agencies)