Phoenix Mars Mission

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The official logo for the Phoenix Mars Mission.

NASA's Phoenix mission was a robotic mission, the first lander in NASA's "Scout class". The lander landed in Mars' north polar region on May 25th 2008, and the scientific package aimed to answer the questions:

  1. Can the Martian arctic support life?
  2. What is the history of water at the landing site?
  3. How is the Martian climate affected by polar dynamics?

The mission name derives from several components built previously for cancelled missions, including 2001's Mars Surveyor lander.

The mission was of considerable interest to planners of human missions to Mars, as many practical mission designs assume the availability of easily-extractable water for fuel production and industrial processes. The polar regions were expected to be the most likely places to find water ice.


Phoenix Lander with instruments labeled


Mission Profile

An artist's impression of the Phoenix lander's "powered landing" on touching down on the Mars surface.


Phoenix lander descending to surface, as imaged by HiRISE

Phoenix was launched on 4th August 2007 on a Delta II 7925 rocket, and the scheduled landing on Mars on 25th May 2008 was successful. The landing site was the ice-capped northern polar region in the Green Valley of Vastitas Borealis.[1]

Although the primary mission was expected to last around 90 sols, the lander was working 152 sols. The last transmission was received on November 2nd, 2008 by the project team.

Wide view from Phoenix lander Solar panels are visible.


Thermal and Evolved Gas Analyzer

Phoenix's Thermal and Evolved Gas Analyzer (TEGA) is a combination of a furnace and a mass spectrometer. Samples of dirt are heated and the gases given off are analyzed with the mass spectrometer. TEGA measured how much water vapor and carbon dioxide gas were given off. Volatile organic compounds were also able to be detected.[2]

Accomplishments

Phoenix has confirmed the presence of water ice in the Martian soil.[3] The soil contains small amounts of salt (perchlorate salt, calcium carbonate).[4] [5] [6] [7] The mildly alkaline soil environment provides good conditions for growing plants.

Perchlorate (ClO4) is a strong oxidizing agent; hence, it may be used for rocket fuel and as a source of oxygen.[8] [9] [10]

Analysis of the first soil sample discovered bound water and CO2 These were released during the highest-temperature, 1,000 °C) heating cycle.[11]

Chemicals measured in the samples were chloride, bicarbonate, magnesium, sodium, potassium, calcium, and sulfate. Further data analysis indicated that the soil contains soluble sulfate (SO3) at a minimum of 1.1% and provided a refined formulation of the soil.[12]

Phoenix studied the atmosphere and found snowfall. The laser instrument found snow falling from clouds at about 2.5 miles (4 km). Snow turned to vapor before landing on the ground.[13] Usually, Phoenix measured wind speeds between 5-10 m/s. It was concluded that heat from the sun sublimates ice and adsorbed water from soil, and when temperatures cool, water is returned as snow and frost to the soil. Temperatures went from -30 C to -90 C,[14] [15]


View under Phoenix spacecraft Bright regions are probably top of an ice sheet.


View from Phoenix showing polygons on surface

See Also

The Phoenix Mars Mission (MarsHome.org)

References:

  1. https://www.webcitation.org/5W4NeGhno?url=http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
  2. Boynton, William V; Bailey, Samuel H; Hamara, David K; Williams, Michael S; Bode, Rolfe C; Fitzgibbon, Michael R; Ko, Wenjeng; Ward, Michael G; Sridhar, K. R; Blanchard, Jeff A; Lorenz, Ralph D; May, Randy D; Paige, David A; Pathare, Asmin V; Kring, David A; Leshin, Laurie A; Ming, Douglas W; Zent, Aaron P; Golden, D. C; Kerry, Kristopher E; Lauer, H. Vern; Quinn, Richard C (2001). "Thermal and Evolved Gas Analyzer: Part of the Mars Volatile and Climate Surveyor integrated payload". Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. 106 (E8): 17683–98.
  3. Smith, P., et al. 2009. H2O at the Phoenix Landing Site. Science: 325, 58-61.
  4. Hecht, M., et al. 2009. Detection of Perchlorate and the Soluble Chemistry of Martian Soil at the Phoenix Lander Site. Science: 325, 64-67.
  5. https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20081110.html
  6. Boynton, W., et al. 2009. Evidence for Calcium Carbonate at the Mars Phoenix Landing Site. Science: 325, 61-64.
  7. http://science.sciencemag.org/content/325/5936/61?ijkey=tmmqZ1fV6F9z.&keytype=ref&siteid=sci
  8. http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/crux/2016/06/20/perchlorate-salt-mars-surface/#.W-Iv85NKjIV
  9. https://www.chegg.com/homework-help/ammonium-perchlorate-rocket-fuel-ammonium-perchlorate-solid-chapter-9-problem-1ce-solution-9781133715078-exc
  10. https://www.quora.com/Could-perchlorate-compounds-on-Mars-be-used-for-rocket-propellant
  11. http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2008/1526.html
  12. Kounaves, Samuel P; Hecht, Michael H; Kapit, Jason; Quinn, Richard C; Catling, David C; Clark, Benton C; Ming, Douglas W; Gospodinova, Kalina; Hredzak, Patricia; McElhoney, Kyle; Shusterman, Jennifer (2010). "Soluble sulfate in the martian soil at the Phoenix landing site". Geophysical Research Letters. 37 (9): L09201.
  13. https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080929.html
  14. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2010cosp...38.1365S
  15. Smith, P. 2010. Atmospheric results from the Phoenix Mars Mission. 38th COSPAR Scientific Assembly. Held 18-15 July 2010, in Bremen, Germany, p.2.

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