It’s been a big week for those long-serving spacecraft we don’t always hear so much about. Earlier this week news broke that Voyager 1 had crossed a benchmark boundary on the far fringes of the solar system, and now Odyssey, launched back in 2001, has surpassed the Mars Global Surveyor as the longest-running mission to Mars.
As NASA's robotic 'naut tweets away its dying breath, the blogosphere pays its respect

Day is Done . . .: Time to whistle "Taps" for the Phoenix Mars Lander. NASA
NASA has begun bidding a planned goodbye to its
Phoenix Mars Lander. The lander relies on solar panels and the sun's golden touch to reawaken it each day, but a dust storm has
hastened the end in the face of the oncoming Martian winter.
After careful analysis, the Phoenix Lander finds Mars's soil is a lot like ours
By Matt Ransford
Posted 06.30.2008 at 6:45 am
Now that the glitches caused by the Martian soil's clumpy consistency have been shaken out, the Phoenix Lander has been able to cook up a few samples to test the soil composition. The preliminary results are surprising even to the chemists at work on the project: the soil is alkaline, and much more so than anyone expected. The analysis has found trace amounts of magnesium, sodium, potassium, and other elements similar to those in the soil on Earth. On first pass, Martian dirt appears to be non-toxic and laden with the basic nutrients necessary to support life.
Just days after discovering ice on Mars, scientists stumble upon morning dew
By Stuart Fox
Posted 06.26.2008 at 3:37 pm
A couple of days ago, it was big news when ice was found on Mars. Now, an upcoming study in the journal Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta claims that the Martian environment was once wet enough to produce morning dew. This finding runs counter to the more widely accepted view that liquid water on Mars seeped up from the ground, rather than falling from the sky as precipitation.
The Phoenix Lander has uncovered what it was sent to look for -- water ice! NASA's follow-up mission hopes to uncover a team of little green hockey players
By Stuart Fox
Posted 06.20.2008 at 4:35 pm
NASA spent $420 million to send the Phoenix Lander to Mars last year. Festooned with state-of-the-art detection equipment, the rover's task was to scour the red surface in search of elusive Martian ice. And today, the NASA mission finally did uncover some extraterrestrial frost, and it did it with its simplest tool, a shovel.
A 3-D stereoscopic imager and a robotic arm camera with an LED flash make up Phoenix's Red Planet gear bag
By John Mahoney
Posted 06.03.2008 at 5:23 pm

Say Cheese, Martians!: The Phoenix Lander's main camera can capture 3-D stereoscopic images. NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
For the past two weeks, NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has been broadcasting a wealth of incredible images from its landing site in the Martian arctic. I've been refreshing the mission's raw photo stream obsessively—no little green men yet, just gorgeous panoramas and detailed closeups of the most foreign of all foreign lands. Being a bit of a camera geek, I was quite curious as to what kind of hardware was behind the action, and naturally, Phoenix has some pretty sweet gear on board to make it all possible.
In a first for NASA, the MRO's high-resolution camera was trained on little brother Phoenix's successful landing this weekend
By John Mahoney
Posted 05.27.2008 at 5:50 pm

Phoenix Lands: The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured this stunning image of the Phoenix Lander making its descent. NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
In the first ever instance of a spacecraft photographing the landing of another craft on Mars, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter captured this incredible image of NASA's Phoenix Lander making its descent on Sunday. Phoenix landed successfully and has already begun transmitting images from its landing zone in Mars's northern polar region, where it will be conducting meteorological and geological surveys over the course of its three-month mission.
NASA's Phoenix probe is in for a wild ride before it settles down on the Red Planet
By Gregory Mone
Posted 05.14.2008 at 11:29 am
Just because NASA has two robots on the surface right now doesn't mean the landing of the Phoenix probe is a sure thing. At a news conference yesterday, NASA officials stressed that landing a spacecraft on Mars isn't easy: 55 percent of all attempts to do so have failed. Not to mention that the technique Phoenix will use to do so hasn't been employed in a while.