Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


After 422m miles, a parking lot on Mars

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 27 May 2008
WITH its monotonous landscape and mile after mile of dirt and dust, it may not seem the most fetching spot to take a set of snaps. But this is one of the first ever photographs taken from the surface of the Martian Arctic, courtesy of Nasa's Phoenix spacecraft.
Taken by a camera mounted aboard the unmanned vehicle, which touched down yesterday following an extraordinary 422 million-mile journey, the pictures have thrilled scientists with their unprecedented views of the Red Planet and its northern polar tundra.

Below the surface lies a thick layer of ice, in which lurk crucial clues as to whether life existed there – and may still exist. Over the next 90 days, Phoenix's robotic arm will dig hard into the frozen soil to claw out ice samples, pop them in its ovens, and analyse the vapours and residue for telltale indicators of life on Mars.

"I know it looks a little like a parking lot," admitted Peter Smith of the University of Arizona, the Phoenix mission's project leader. "But it's exactly what we wanted and I couldn't be more pleased. This is a scientist's dream right here on this landing site."

Phoenix, designed and operated by some of the world's finest scientific minds, came in for a textbook landing at 12:53am UK time yesterday following a risky, high-speed plunge through the Martian atmosphere in which it had stood only a 50-50 chance of survival.

In the mission control room at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, scientists and engineers who have spent the last decade working on the project chewed anxiously on their pens as they awaited a signal from the spacecraft that it had landed without mishap.

When the signal finally came, relayed across the solar system by Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter flying overhead, the control room erupted into scenes of jubilation. "Today, you have had a chance to watch a team in action making something that's incredibly hard look easy," Dr Mike Griffin, the head of Nasa, told reporters. "You know they are the most expert of the expert when they can do that."

Not only did Phoenix touch down safely, as only 45 per cent of previous Mars landers have done, but it settled in an almost perfectly flat spot within a highly precise target range.

Dr Ed Weiler, Nasa's associate administrator for science missions, likened the pinpoint accuracy of such a landing to a golfer teeing off in Washington and scoring a hole in one in Sydney, Australia. "That's not a bad shot," he added.

After opening its solar wings to harness energy from the sun and recharge its batteries, Phoenix swiftly hoisted its mast and swivelled its camera to photograph its new home.

Like many an amateur photographer, it even managed to take a picture of one of its own feet, reassuring ground handlers that it was firmly planted in the Martian dust.

From the pictures, the northern polar plains of Mars look like a patchwork quilt of polygonal shapes.

Mars' tundra has only ever been photographed from space before, and Phoenix is the first vehicle to land there.

"We see the lack of rocks that we expected, we saw the polygons … it looks great to me," said Mr Smith."Underneath this surface, I guarantee, is ice."

WHAT NEXT?

PHOENIX'S robotic arm has been tested in the rocky landscape of California's Death Valley and can dig through soil as tough as concrete. Its claw is similar to that used by ice sculptors. Both will swing into action later in the week once they have been sent commands from ground control.

The vehicle will also be sending back more photographs, including a panorama of its surroundings. One image in particular was intriguing technicians yesterday because it showed an unidentified white object on the near horizon. It could be Phoenix's parachute or heat shield, both of which were jettisoned as it came in to land in the Martian arctic.

However, Dr Charles Elachi, director of Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, revealed that Dr Weiler had already put forward an alternative theory. "Ed thinks it's a polar bear," he said.

Time capsule DVD that leaves a cultural footprint of Earth for the future

ON BOARD Phoenix is a DVD, sent by The Planetary Society, an influential space advocacy group dedicated to exploration of the solar system and the search for life beyond Earth, containing messages to future human inhabitants of Mars.

The disc, intended as a digital time capsule, holds personal greetings recorded by space visionaries, such as the late science-fiction author Arthur C Clarke, who wrote 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ray Bradbury, the author of The Martian Chronicles, and Isaac Asimov, the author of the Foundation series.

It also holds a collection of Mars-themed literature and artwork, including a poster from the 1936 film Mars Attacks the World, depicting the intergalactic hero Flash Gordon preparing to battle a tyrannical Martian ruler called Ming the Merciless.

Audio recordings also stored on the disc include Orson Welles's chilling 1938 radio broadcast of War of the Worlds – the tale of an invasion by Martians that was so realistic it caused public panic in the US – and narrations by the British actor Patrick Stewart, who played Captain Picard in Star Trek: The Next Generation.

"It could be centuries from now, on the planet Mars, when a man, or a woman, or perhaps a child, will come across this small disc," said Carl Sagan, the head of The Planetary Society.

"When this future Martian picks up this tame-looking disc, he or she will hold in their hands a message from our world, addressed to theirs.

"The disc will be part of a relic of an ancient unmanned spacecraft named Phoenix, which landed on the planet in 2008.

"Possibly preserved as a historic memento, perhaps long abandoned and forgotten, Phoenix will have kept its secret through the long Martian years."

Louis D Friedman, executive director of The Planetary Society, came up with the idea when his friend, Isaac Asimov, died. "I began thinking – how do we honour him?" Mr Friedman recalled. "And it's not just him. It's what he represented. So then I thought: why not honour three giants, Asimov, Bradbury and Clarke – A,B,C – and do it by sending their stories to Mars. Then I began discussing it with Carl and other people and it grew into this bigger idea, this notion of a science-fiction anthology."

MORE INFO: www.nasa.gov

The full article contains 1088 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 27/05/2008 00:26:15

I TELL YOU WHAT!

PLEASE DO WHAT,?

YA DONT KNOW,?

NO!

MUGS!

WHY,?

YOU WONT GET AWAY WITH THAT,..'PARKING TICKET'!

(even on mars)

And if you don't pay it!

You will be towed away to,..'outer-space'!

I have inside information,,you know! :D
2

jamtart,

Beechboro Western Australia 27/05/2008 03:14:00
#1
You are a raving nutter and should be in a padded room.
3

Boy Wonder,

27/05/2008 08:17:45
Brilliant. Once more going boldly where only aliens have gone before! :D

#1. Jamtart ... I object to you calling Chuckles Linskaill a raving nutter. He's a doddery, senile 94 year old who's obviously missed his meds again. Please show him more respect.
4

Norman C.,

London 27/05/2008 08:23:28
Marvellous scientific feat I suppose.

But somehow, with millions dying, more millions starving, homeless, enslaved, dying of aids and thirst and hunger, children exploited, huge numbers suffering in Darfur, Burma, Congo, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, and elsewhere, watched by an powerless United Nations wringing its crocodile hands, the Mars trip seems a luxurious and unwarranted distraction. I know the money spent on the trip wouldn't go to alleviate suffering, but still ..... it's just not right, not moral, not appropriate, not fair.
5

voltaire's janny,

27/05/2008 08:53:16
Norman - get a life.

Get a better metaphor. Crocodile hands! Brings tears tae ma een.

Get out your Visa and give 50 quid to the disaster relief fund.

One day the sun will expand and boil away the earth's oceans. If future Luddites are still around in stewardship of this planet (doubtful) they may thank the pioneers who developed exploration of near space for carrying some vestige of humanity beyond the solar system.

Hootsmon! Can ye no get the notation right in a science article. Its 422M miles no' 422m.....
6

Yane,

27/05/2008 10:23:50
#2 My word, it does look like parts of Australia doesn't it?
7

Billy Boy,

Sherman Oaks 27/05/2008 12:24:43
I have to agree with Norman. Here in California -I live 20 miles from the JPL- only 30 percent of the population have health Insurance, We have 40,000 homeless, our streets are crumbling, our prisons are full, we have terrible traffic problems, schools that are more like "juvenile institutions" virtually NO infrastructure improvements in 30 years. Why the hell are we wasting this money on this nonsense? It is DENIAL, we create these diversions in order to take the focus off our problems. The Russians at least are trying to make their efforts pay. C'mon Obama, lets see what you can do!
8

AtheT,

North of Kelso 27/05/2008 13:49:23
#8. Billy Boy, if the wack jobs in Kalifornia werent so afraid of hurting feelings theyd have safer streets and empty prisons. But you people think crime came be detered by holding hands and singing Kumbuya. If the Libs werent in control, San Fransico would still be a good place to visit and the left wingers would still be in Moscow instead of Hollywierd.
9

JAL,

Green Bay 27/05/2008 15:51:42
Norman & Billy Boy - And if we hadn't followed our natural instict to explore where would be now? Still hunting and gathering on the African plains with a life expectancy of around 30.
10

Spicey,

Glasgow 27/05/2008 15:53:59
#5 and #8 - The money spent on this would only go a small way to solving all of the worlds problems. This project is about thinking about the future, especially as we are quickly ruining this world and may have to think about finding a new home pretty soon....
11

esskay,

Virginia USA 27/05/2008 17:00:59
One thing to consider, Norman and Billy Boy:
Some of the technologies that this science develops often has a "trickle-down" effect so that we gain in those areas of your mentioned concerns.
For example, the article points out the energy source for Phoenix. It landed and...

" ....After opening its solar wings to harness energy from the sun and recharge its batteries, "

Phoenix's solar set-up might well be used in many ways, freeing up other resources to help poverty, hunger, etc. here on this planet.
I realize solar power isn't a sole product of space exploration, but using it in the program has got to boost its use here on earth, if only because it becomes refined in the process.
12

SmartScotUSA,

Mt Pleasant 27/05/2008 17:15:58
I have to agree with #11 & 12, the problems that others complain about aren't solvable by money - the people in power of those countries steal the money and let the victims suffer. And the UN is worthless, just another political body where the corrupt Chinese, Russians, and French can prevent the US and UK from actually doing anything good (though there should be a profit in it as well - I'm not that naive).
13

Former Glaswegian,

Vancouver, Canada 27/05/2008 20:04:16
The most astonishing thing about this report is the comment by Carl Sagan. He died in 1996!
14

Kiltie Kiltie Caldbum,

3 sters up 27/05/2008 21:16:03
To all the bleeding heart liberals on this blog about the money spent on this project. Look at it this way, it's not money going into a Swiss bank account by all the tinhorn dictators on this planet.
Instead of critisizing science, critisize mans inhumanity to mankind.
15

Douglas,

Bathgate 27/05/2008 21:27:19
#14 Former Glaswegian:

Sagan
Exhibits
Talkative
Interment
16

Conan the Librarian™,

27/05/2008 22:05:41
14
So you are an expert in quantum physics, circa 1996?;-)
17

Conan the Librarian™,

27/05/2008 22:10:36
16
Douglas
How can you become a "former" Weegie?

Move to Aldebaran?
18

Conan the Librarian™,

27/05/2008 22:12:05
Or Canada:-)
19

Rothiemurchus 55,

Florida USA 28/05/2008 05:16:25
422 million at 1$ per mile..sounds like cheap gas...Didn't the "trekkies" do this outing back in 1968?...NASA= New American Space Adventure...What fun.My Tonka toy worked better in my back yard in 1960.
20

Norman C.,

London. 28/05/2008 09:03:20
Hmm.

I thought there's be the usual immediate "You're a Luddite" accusations.

One doesn't have to be anti-science to be aware of the contrast between the billions spent on sending a ship to Mars and the suffering of millions on this (our own) planet for want of the will to help them. Of course it should be possible to send rockets to Mars (if you feel you absolutely have to) AND feed the starving. But it's not happening.

Seems quite a simple point to make. but surely worth making. Again and again and again.
21

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 03/06/2008 16:19:58
An excellent achievement. One problem - to quote B. Connolly "There's nothing there". Cynical bit over.

Hope someone had some change for the meter.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 

Featured Advertising



Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.