Phoenix Returns Treasure Trove for Science



FROM: Lori Stiles (520-360-0574; lstiles@xxxxxxxxxxxxx)

Phoenix Returns Treasure Trove for Science
University of Arizona
June 26, 2008

NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander performed its first wet chemistry on
Martian soil
flawlessly yesterday, returning a wealth of data that for Phoenix
scientists
was like winning the lottery.

"We are awash in chemistry data," said Michael Hecht of NASA's Jet
Propulsion
Laboratory, lead scientist for the Microscopy, Electrochemistry and
Conductivity Analyzer, or MECA, instrument on Phoenix. "We're trying
to
understand what is the chemistry of wet soil on Mars, what's dissolved
in it,
how acidic or alkaline it is. With the results we received from
Phoenix
yesterday, we could begin to tell what aspects of the soil might
support life."

"This is the first wet-chemical analysis ever done on Mars or any
planet, other
than Earth," Phoenix co-investigator Sam Kounaves of Tufts University,
science
lead for the wet chemistry laboratory investigation, said.

About 80 percent of Phoenix's first, two-day wet chemistry experiment
is now
complete. Phoenix has three more wet-chemistry cells for use later in
the
mission.

"This soil appears to be a close analog to surface soils found in the
upper dry
valleys in Antarctica," Kounaves said. "The alkalinity of the soil at
this
location is definitely striking. At this specific location, one inch
into the
surface layer, the soil is very basic, with a pH of between eight and
nine. We
also found a variety of components of salts that we haven't had time
to analyze
and identify yet, but that include magnesium, sodium, potassium and
chloride."

"This is more evidence for water because salts are there. We also
found a
reasonable number of nutrients, or chemicals needed by life as we know
it,"
Kounaves said. "Over time, I've come to the conclusion that the
amazing thing
about Mars is not that it's an alien world, but that in many aspects,
like
mineralogy, it's very much like Earth."

Another analytical Phoenix instrument, the Thermal and Evolved-Gas
Analyzer
(TEGA), has baked its first soil sample to 1,000 degrees Celsius
(1,800 degrees
Fahrenheit). Never before has a soil sample from another world been
baked to
such high heat.

TEGA scientists have begun analyzing the gases released at a range of
temperatures to identify the chemical make-up of soil and ice.
Analysis is a
complicated, weeks-long process.

But "the scientific data coming out of the instrument has been just
spectacular," said Phoenix co-investigator William Boynton of the
University of
Arizona, lead TEGA scientist.

"At this point, we can say that the soil has clearly interacted with
water in
the past. We don't know whether that interaction occurred in this
particular
area in the northern polar region, or whether it might have happened
elsewhere
and blown up to this area as dust."

Phoenix project scientist Leslie Tamppari tallied what Phoenix has
accomplished
during the first 30 Martian days of its mission, and outlined future
plans.

The Stereo Surface Imager has by now completed about 55 percent of its
three-color, 360-degree panorama of the Phoenix landing site, Tamppari
said.
Phoenix has analyzed two samples in its optical microscope as well as
first
samples in both TEGA and the wet chemistry laboratory. Phoenix has
been
collecting information daily on clouds, dust, winds, temperatures and
pressures
in the atmosphere, as well as taken first nighttime atmospheric
measurements.
Lander cameras confirmed that white chunks exposed during trench
digging were
frozen water ice because they sublimated, or vaporized, over a few
days.

Phoenix robotic arm dug and sampled, and will continue to dig and
sample, at the
'Snow White' trench in the center of a polygon in the polygonal
terrain.

"We believe this is the best place for creating a profile of the
surface from
the top down to the anticipated icy layer," Tamppari said. "This is
the plan we
wanted to do when we proposed the mission many years ago. We wanted a
place just
like this where we could sample the soil down to the possible ice
layer."

The Phoenix mission is led by Peter Smith of The University of Arizona
with
project management at JPL and development partnership at Lockheed
Martin,
located in Denver. International contributions come from the Canadian
Space
Agency; the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland; the universities of
Copenhagen and Aarhus, Denmark; Max Planck Institute, Germany; and the
Finnish
Meteorological Institute. For more information on the Phoenix mission,
link to
http://www.nasa.gov/phoenix and http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu.

MEDIA CONTACTS:
Guy Webster, Jet Propulsion Laboratory
(818-354-6278; guy.webster@xxxxxxxxxxxx)
J.D. Harrington, NASA HQ
(202-358-5241; j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx)
Sara Hammond, University of Arizona
(520-626-1974; shammond@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
.



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