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A NASA handout image shows the Robotic
Arm on NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander with a sample of martian soil. A NASA
statement said that analysis of images from NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has
scientists increasingly convinced of ice near the Red Planet's North
Pole. (Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, July 23 (Xinhuanet) -- NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander went sleepless Monday for the first time as mission controllers extended its schedule to remain awake during the Martian night so the spacecraft could coordinate with observations made by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter as it flew overhead.
Phoenix is
using its weather station (which measures temperature, wind speed and wind
direction), stereo camera and fork-like thermal and conductivity probe to
monitor changes in the lower atmosphere and at the surface of Mars as MRO
monitors the atmosphere and ground from above.
The 420
million U.S. dollar Phoenix mission, which touched down in the northern reaches
of Mars on May 25, is examining the Martian dirt and underlying ice to look for
possible signs of habitability in the planet's past. MRO has been orbiting Mars
for two years now, studying its surface with cameras, spectrometers and radar.
The lander
also stuck its conductivity probe into the Martian dirt Sunday for more than 24
hours of measurements. One goal of this test is to see whether some of the water
ice trapped in the regolith becomes vapor and enters the atmosphere as the time
of day, and therefore the amount of sunlight hitting the ground, changes.
"We are
looking for patterns of movement and phase change," said Michael Hecht, lead
scientist for Phoenix's Microscopy, Electrochemistry and Conductivity Analyzer,
which includes the fork-like probe. "The probe is working great. We see some
changes in soil electrical properties, which may be related to water, but we're
still chewing on the data."
Phoenix can
also stick its conductivity probe up in the air and monitor changes in the
atmospheric humidity.
(Agencies)
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Martian ice melts in this combination
photo taken by NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander's Surface Stereo Imager on June
15 and 18, 2008, in this handout image released by NASA June 20, 2008. A
trench dug by Phoenix with its robotic arm at the arctic circle of Mars
shows dice-sized chunks of white material that are seen to melt away over
the course of several days. The presence of water on Mars is crucial
because it is a key to the question of whether life, even in the form of
mere microbes, exists or has ever existed on Mars. On Earth, water is a
necessary ingredient for life. (Xinhua/Reuters/NASA Photo) Photo
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