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Cassini detects arcs of material at Saturn moons 9/7/2008

A fine-tooth comb to measure the accelerating universe 9/7/2008

Analysis Begins on Phoenix Lander's Deepest Soil Sample 9/6/2008

Rosetta Steins fly-by confirmed 9/6/2008

XMM-Newton's massive discovery 9/5/2008

Theory of the sun's role in formation of the solar system questioned 9/5/2008

Closest Look Ever at the Edge of a Black Hole 9/4/2008

The Thousand-Ruby Galaxy 9/4/2008

Cosmic connections: Scientist locates the origin of cosmic dust 9/3/2008

Integral locates origin of high-energy emission from Crab Nebula 9/2/2008

Antarctic research helps shed light on climate change on Mars 9/1/2008

Cluster watches Earth's leaky atmosphere 8/31/2008

GLAST Observatory renamed for Fermi, reveals entire gamma-ray sky 8/30/2008

Scientists discover minimum mass for galaxies 8/29/2008

A Clash of Clusters Provides Another Clue to Dark Matter 8/28/2008

Search For Life In Martian Ice Relies On UK Technology (7/28/2007)

Tags:
mars, water, phoenix lander, landers

Tom Pike at Mission Control - Photo Credit: Imperial College London
Tom Pike at Mission Control - Photo Credit: Imperial College London
The Martian surface will be explored for conditions favourable for past or present life thanks to micro-machine technology supplied by Imperial College London. The NASA mission, planned for August 2007, represents the first chance for UK hardware to contribute to the exploration of Mars since the failed Beagle 2 spacecraft launched in 2003.

Dr Tom Pike and his team at Imperial's Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering have provided substrates-surfaces used to hold samples for imaging-for the Mars Phoenix mission. These substrates will hold dust and soil for examination in a microscope station attached to the Phoenix lander.

The grains of Martian dust and soil, delivered by a mechanical excavating arm, will be imaged by an optical microscope and an atomic force microscope. Together they will provide the highest resolution of imaging ever taken on another planet.

"Nobody has looked at Mars at this type of resolution. It is very difficult to predict what we might find, but if you wanted to look for the earliest forms of past or present life we will be the first to look closely enough," said Dr Pike.

The team has been conducting trials on a replica of Phoenix's microscope station based at Imperial. They have been using the equipment for several months to work out the best way of studying the Martian soil.

They also visited Mission Control at the University of Arizona Tucson USA (14-20 July 2007). As part of the "operational readiness" process Dr Pike and his colleagues spent a week going through a simulation of the actual mission.

The launch date is scheduled for a three-week period after 3 August 2007. The aim of the NASA mission is to search for potential biological habitable zones. The Phoenix lander is scheduled to touch down on the northern ice-rich polar region known as the Vastitas Borealis.The mission represents the first attempt to actually touch and analyse Martian water in the form of buried ice. The spacecraft will investigate whether frozen water near the Martian surface might periodically melt enough to sustain a habitable zone for primitive microbes.

If Phoenix lands successfully scientists will have three months to complete their tasks. They will race against the clock to dig for, and analyse, materials before the Martian winter sets in and the solar panels no longer provide enough power to run the vehicle.

During the analysis phase Dr Pike and his team will be based at Mission Control. They will be part of the team operating the microscope station.

The construction of the microscope station is an international collaboration with contributions from the U.S., Switzerland, Demark and the UK. The UK involvement is supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council.

"This is the first chance since the Beagle mission that the UK will be able to help explore the surface of Mars. It is great to have the resources and the people at Imperial to enable us to take part in this mission," said Dr Pike.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Imperial College London

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