NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has spent
the last few weeks digging new trenches in its landing area, looking for new
materials to analyze in its instruments and examining the soil and subsurface
layer of water ice.
New trenches opened recently include
the "Burn Alive 3" trench in the "Wonderland" digging area
in the eastern portion of the ground that Phoenix's
robotic arm can reach and the "Stone Soup" trench in the "Cupboard"
excavation area near the western end of the lander's
workspace.
The informal names given to digging
areas and samples come largely from fairy
tales and folklore and are intended to aid the team's discussion of the
mission.
Phoenix landed in the arctic region of Mars
on May 25. The $420 million mission is digging up and analyzing samples of
Martian dirt and the rock-hard subsurface layer of water ice that underlies the
Martian arctic to look for clues to the potential past habitability of the red
planet.
"We expect to use the robotic
arm heavily over the next several weeks, delivering samples to our instruments
and examining trench floors and walls to continue to search for evidence of
lateral and vertical variations in soil and ice structures," said Ray
Arvidson, Phoenix's "dig czar," from Washington University in St.
Louis.
Phoenix is excavating one side of Burn
Alive 3 down to the ice layer and plans to leave about 0.4 inches (1
centimeter) of soil above the ice on the other side of the trench. Leaving that
layer, which lies just above the ice-dirt boundary, will give the Phoenix
science team the vertical profile of the Martian surface they want to analyze
for a sample dubbed "Burning Coals," which is intended to be the next
sample delivered to Phoenix's Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer (TEGA).
TEGA heats up samples in its tiny
ovens and then analyzes the vapors given off to determine the composition of
the material in the samples. The last sample delivered to TEGA, on Aug. 7, was
to be analyzed for signs
of perchlorate, a highly oxidizing substance that
was detected in dirt samples by the lander's wet
chemistry laboratory. Perchlorate could be a
potential energy source to any microbes that may, if ever, have existed on
Mars.
A sample from the Cupboard digging
area may be delivered to the wet chemistry lab. Where exactly the sample would
come from will depend on the results of digging in the "Upper
Cupboard" area and results from the lander's
thermal and electrical conductivity probe, which is located on Phoenix's robotic arm and is inserted into
the icy dirt to test for the presence of salts.
Mission controllers also plan to dig up an
ice-rich sample from Upper Cupboard and observe the material in the robotic arm
scoop to see whether or not the sample sublimates (turns directly from ice into
vapor).
In upcoming sols, or Martian days,
the Phoenix
team plans to scrape the "Snow White" trench and experiment with
holding samples of icy dirt in the shade and sun to see if prolonged exposure
to sunlight causes the material to stick to the scoop.
The stickiness of samples has been a
problem in terms of delivering the dirt to TEGA, because the samples tend to
stick to the scoop and clump at the screened opening to the instrument's ovens.
So far, scientists are unsure what is causing the samples to clump.