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The optical microscope on NASA's Phoenix
Mars Lander shows soil sprinkled from the lander's robot arm scoop onto a
silicone substrate in this handout image released on June 13, 2008. This
is the first sample collected and delivered for instrumental analysis
onboard a planetary lander since NASA's Viking Mars missions of the 1970s.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, June 13 (Xinhua) -- New observations from
NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander provided the most magnified view ever seen of Martian
soil, showing particles clumping together even at the smallest visible scale,
the mission science team reported on Friday.
In the past two days, two instruments on the lander
deck -- a microscope and a bake-and-sniff analyzer -- have begun inspecting soil
samples delivered by the scoop on Phoenix's Robotic Arm.
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View from the Surface Stereo Imager on
NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander shows the first impression dubbed Yeti and
shaped like a wide footprint -- made on the Martian soil by the robotic
arm scoop on Sol 6, the sixth Martian day of the mission, (May 31, 2008).
Touching the ground is the first step toward scooping up soil and ice and
delivering the samples to the lander's onboard experiments.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Images from Phoenix's Optical Microscope showed
nearly 1,000 separate soil particles, down to size smaller than one-tenth the
diameter of a human hair. At least four distinct minerals are seen, the team
said.
"I'm absolutely gobsmacked that we're now looking at
the soil of Mars at a resolution that has never been seen before," said TomPike
of Imperial College London, who is a Phoenix co-investigator working on the
lander's Microscopy, Electrochemistry and Conductivity Analyzer.
The sample includes some larger, black, glassy
particles as well as smaller reddish ones. "We may be looking at a history of
the soil," said Pike. "It appears that original particles of volcanic glass have
weathered down to smaller particles with higher concentration of iron."
The fine particles in the soil sample closely
resemble particles of airborne dust examined earlier by the microscope.
"This is the first time since the Viking (Mars
exploration) missions three decades ago that a sample is being studied inside an
instrument on Mars," said Phoenix Principal Investigator Peter Smith on Friday.
Stickiness of the soil at the Phoenix landing site
has presented not only challenges for delivering samples but also scientific
opportunities.
"Understanding the soil is a major goal of this
mission and the soil is a bit different than we expected," Smith said. "There
could be real discoveries to come as we analyze this soil with our various
instruments. We have just the right instruments for the job."
NASA's Mars lander delivers 1st soil
sample to microscope ¡¡
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A white layer visible where the Phoenix
Lander robotic arm scooped away the martian soil. NASA said images
received on Thursday confirmed that its Phoenix Mars lander has sprinkled
a spoonful of Martian soil onto the sample wheel of the spacecraft¡¯s
robotic microscope station. (Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, June 12 (Xinhua) -- NASA said images
received on Thursday confirmed that its Phoenix Mars lander has sprinkled a
spoonful of Martian soil onto the sample wheel of the spacecraft's robotic
microscope station.
"It looks like a light dusting and that's just what
we wanted," said Michael Hecht of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who is the
lead scientist for the Microscopy, Electrochemistry and Conductivity Analyzer
(MECA) instrument on Phoenix.