Best of What's New 2008

NASA Mars Lander

Life on Mars within reach

Aviation & Space 1 of 11
NASA Mars Lander main

Aside from actual living things, the ultimate find for planetary science is the stuff that makes life possible: water. That’s exactly what NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander found in July, when its scooping device uncovered clumps of ice buried just beneath the surface of the Martian arctic plain. Guided by a team of scientists at the University of Arizona, the Lockheed Martin–built spacecraft has been up there since May, gathering soil samples using its robotic arm and capturing the highest-resolution images of another planet ever taken. Phoenix analyzes Martian soil and ice samples using the most advanced onboard microscopes, electro-chemistry analyzers, high-temperature furnaces, and mass spectrometers ever sent to another planet, breaking down the raw material of the Red Planet into its most basic components. The lander stores that data on a one-terabyte solid-state hard drive and then beams it—along with meteorological data captured by its weather-monitoring tools—back to Earth. But all things must pass: Any day now, as the Martian winter brings on months of nonstop darkness, the solar-powered lander will shut down, most likely for good. phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu

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Comments

pretty cool; what next?

ZeroWing

from bennett, co

Okay, a robot landed on Mars. If that could do it, so can we. And we can study the dirt when we get there. Spend the money of the equipment, fuel, and engineers on something more useful, like a way of getting a crew there alive.

I was excited for NASA when this landed on Mars. Just imagine how much research went into designing this machine. To go from launch, to almost a year in space and then to land and deploy it on another planet. Simply amazing.

I agree.. What's next?

I just blogged about this at
http://chaptor.scroggles.com/2009/01/14/mars-fuel-to-go-please/

Another really significant thing about finding water on Mars is that we do not need to lift enough reaction mass up to Mars to come home! We can get fuel-to-go while we are there! All we need to haul is the energy, we can take water or water ice to make fuel by electrolysis, or even just heat the water and toss steam out the back to propel us home. (See several links at my blog.)

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