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It
was a good news/bad news day on Mars Thursday, with a tentative sighting of ice
by the Mars Phoenix Lander, but also a newly discovered glitch in the oven
system that will analyze soil samples.
Scientists reported the
findings during a May 30 briefing about the lander’s fourth day (or Sol, for
Mars time) on Mars.
Flexing its muscles for the
first time, the robotic arm on
“We don’t know what it is,” says
Over the next few days,
scientists will command the robot’s camera to get closer to the exposed
material and take pictures through different color filters in an effort to
identify its composition. But the area isn’t close enough to the arm for it to reach
out and scoop up the stuff.
Scientists are now debating
the first place to dig and when to begin a practice exercise, in which the arm
would make initial contact with the soil, scoop a small sample and then dump
it. Once the arm begins regular operation, it will deliver samples to miniature
ovens and a spectrometer.
However, researchers have discovered that one of
the two filaments that heats and ionizes samples delivered to the ovens has a
short circuit. Scientists are now investigating the problem and determining if
the other filament, which is operating normally, can be used exclusively if
needed, Bill Boynton of the
Found in: Atom & Cosmos and Planetary Science
-
Bob: Click on the picture (then click again on the new picture), and you will eventually get the full image (same size as I found at JPL)
Zonn Moore
May. 31, 2008 at 12:21am -
Google linked me to your site, and I hate to complain but, the image of what may be water under the lander on Mars is to small to pick out even what the subject is about. You need to link to the JPL site where you can get a look the subject. A small picture is worth a hundred words, a large picture is worth a thousand words. Your picture is to small.
Bob Keller
May. 30, 2008 at 6:05pm
