Phoenix Digs First Mars Soil Sample To Analyze
An anonymous reader writes "Nearly two weeks after its historic landing, the US Mars probe Phoenix has scooped up its first sample of Martian soil and begun analyzing it for water and organic compounds.
The test dig made Sunday by the Phoenix Mars Lander's 8-foot-long robotic arm uncovered bits of bright specks in the soil believed to be ice or salt.
Mission controllers will send instructions to the lander to dump the sample into one of the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer (TEGA) ovens. The TEGA ovens, which are about an inch long and the diameter of a pencil lead, will heat up the soil samples and use a mass spectrometer to detect the gases that come off the samples, which will shed light on some of the materials in the soil, specifically those formed by the process of liquid water."
I first read that as Phoenix really getting a kick out of the sample. Man I'm old.
Perhaps some day in my lifetime we can get some feet on mars. God only knows it won't happen in the current climate.
Women are like electronics: you don't know how damaged they are until you try to turn them on.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7442233.stm
My web domain.
Is this the same sample that reportedly it to "clumpy" to fall through the sieve screen into the analyzer? If so this is old news.
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to think "profiling is worse than the slaughter of innocent people..."
'cause then an American manned mission to Mars would be guaranteed!
/ducks.
"I bless every day that I continue to live, for every day is pure profit."
*Sigh*. If you're going to use Slashdot to pimp your pointless tech blog, please at least make sure your information is up-to-date.
Latest news: dirt seems to be stuck, possibly too cakey to enter test chamber. Engineers are working on a solution.
Now where's *my* ten million site visits?
Those bacteria in greenland were what, 2 miles into the ice? They're gonna need a longer digging arm.
stuff |
All this time spent on the Martian surface and they're starting to dig now? What were they doing all this time? I mean, how hard can it be to extend that arm and just dump some dust in the test chamber? It certainly can't take so many days to do it.
Sig
"The TEGA ovens, which are about an inch long and the diameter of a pencil lead" I wonder if it can roast a turkey dinner...
"process of liquid water"
Last I checked liquid water is called ice, is a noun not a verb, and the only materials that need to be present for it are hydrogen and oxygen.
Is it my imagination or is Mars melting?
If you look closely at recent pictures of the first trench it looks like the white stuff has melted. Also the sample in the scoop looks a little runny.
Given how successful the mobile rovers have been, does anyone know about the logic of going with a stationary lander this time around?
Ceci n'est pas une sig.
http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/214812main_EarthMoon-browse.jpg
But the question is, where are the stars?
Apollo Project, Total Cost (1962-1973, 2007 USD): $114,758,279,830.00
Total NASA Budget (1962-1973, 2007 USD): $233,725,177,610.00
City of Tokyo, Japan Gross Domestic Product 2006: $1,191,000,000,000.00
City of Chicago, Illinois Gross Domestic Product 2006: $460,000,000,000.00
Taiwan's Gross Domestic Product 2006: $346,400,000,000.00
Estimated Cost of Space Shuttle Program at Retirement: $174,000,000,000.00
State of Iowa's Gross Domestic Product 2006: $106,346,000,000.00
Microsoft Corporation Earnings for 2006: $44,282,000,000.00
ExxonMobil Earnings for 2006: $39,500,000,000.00
National City Bank's earnings for 2006: $12,952,000,000.00
IBM's Earnings for 2006: $3,500,000,000.00
New York Yankees baseball team, value in 2006: $1,026,000,000.00
Oprah's 2006 Earnings: $260,000,000.00
Boeing 747 Model 400: $230,000,000.00
Just some numbers I tabbed up awhile back...
Rather than complain about stale stories, link to newer ones. You may even get modpoints for it. Anyhow, here's the best update I've found so far:
http://planetary.org/blog/article/00001501
They are having problems getting the soil to go through the screen. Although one of the pod doors (insert HAL jokes) didn't open all the way, the soil appears to have reached the screen based on the images. They dumped an extra-large load to compensate for the jammed door. The problem is that the sensors did not detect any soil going through the screen. They are now trying to figure out if its the nature of the soil (clumpy?) or an instrument problem.
If its an instrument failure, fortunately they have 7 other "ovens" to try. Redundancy is nice.
Table-ized A.I.
If only we spent as much on Space exploration as we do on the War Machine. I'd be planning my vacation on the Moon or at least to the Hilton in orbit.
The first dig and attempt to analyze it has already been done days ago. The worst part is that it was a failure since the soil was too cloggy, but yet this article fails to mention that.
CmdrTaco -
:)
I have been reading Slashdot for all of your 10 years, so I think I've got standing to say this. Your other "editors" do a better job at posting stories, so please let them do it. Your posts are frequently either poorly chosen (as in this case), or have regettable editorializing at the end. Just let the other guys do post selection, or figure out some new way to stay involved with story selection without actually doing the posting.
Your audience thanks you for your continued efforts
One simple rule for its versus it's
the dirt landed on the outside of the lander but none made it inside the oven: http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=5020876
Now listen to me before the Vogons destroy the earth.
Here's how we win the "War on Terror" and get to Mars (and back safely) at a fraction of the cost of the war in Iraq.
So we, the West (unfortunately I'm a Brit and we don't do outer space but humour me please) send people to Mars and back on a long term project with permanently personned outposts etc. in a continuous cycle.
Hell, I'll volunteer to design the nuclear propulsion for the craft.
Meanwhile we carpet bomb the ignorant Islamofascist dictatorships with propaganda leaflets, radio and TV broadcasts of our achievements.
There is no earthly way that the hungry, cold masses in those countries will stand for the medieval war-mongering ways of their oppressive, misogynistic, greedy, tyrannical leaders when they see what real humanity can achieve.
Within 6 months, Al Qaeda, the Taliban etc. will wither away and die (be lynched with a bit of luck) by the human being majority.
The human race needs inspiration, and with the right goals will become one.
oh crikey, i'm turning into a hippy, pass the peace pipe....
Stick Men
Correction: should be "discoverer", not "discover". (That word must have been invented by a stuttererer.)
Table-ized A.I.
I would say a huge difference between the 1960s and today is computational power. In the 1960s there was no ability to simulate what would happen to various rocket designs under various conditions: you had to build one and try it, or, if that was too expensive, just go with a mix of safety factors and prayer. The difference in time, effort and money between sorting through engineering designs in silico and in real life is substantial. There's a good reason why Boeing was an early and enthusiastic purchasers of supercomputers.
Additionally, we've already demonstrated a pretty sophisticated remote-control ability on Mars, which leads to the possibility of reducing both risk and cost by sending the return craft ahead of time to Mars, and having it, if possible, extract its fuel from the Martian soil and atmosphere. That way you don't even launch your crew until you know they have a ride home waiting for them. Furthermore, you save the cost of the fuel it takes to transport your fuel to Mars, which is enormous.
But that's only possible because we have such phenomenally greater capability for building autonomous machines.
(I don't disagree with you that it's difficult, BTW. Just saying that we have some advantages now that one could reasonably say make it no harder, relatively speaking, than going to the Moon in 1969. Also worth bearing in mind is the fact that the US economy is maybe 3 times bigger now than it was then.)
The following image sequence confirms that the screen vibrator works, because the soil on the screen slumped down after a vibrating session. This rules out one device problem, but does not rule out problems with the soil detection sensor inside, below the screen. It appears they believe clumpy soil is the likely culprit for the problem and they are devising and testing work-arounds to use on the other ovens. This means they may abandon the first oven, at least for a while.
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080609.html
Table-ized A.I.
I think we'll never end up in mars because our technology is too bad. We spend more time on war and poisoning the earth. We need to remove fossil fuels, develop clean alternative energy like how the sun makes it's energy, fusion I think it's called? Then the rest will fall into place. If we don't clean up the earth we could end up like mars then we won't have to go there. We just all have to stop our greed and fighting. If we spent time and money on technology instead of wars and stuff, we would probley have anti gravity or something by now and it would be easy to go to mars.