Phoenix (spacecraft)
| This article or section documents a current or recent spaceflight. Details may change as the mission progresses. |
| This article contains information regarding a spacecraft that is is scheduled to land on Mars in the next 3 days. Details may change as the descent and landing progress. |
| Phoenix Mars Mission | |
Artist's conception of the Phoenix spacecraft as it lands on Mars |
|
| Organization | NASA |
|---|---|
| Mission type | Lander |
| Launch date | August 4, 2007 |
| Launch vehicle | Delta II 7925 |
| Mission duration | 90 sols, 92.46 days |
| NSSDC ID | 2007-034A |
| Webpage | http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/ |
Phoenix is a robotic spacecraft on a space exploration mission to Mars under the Mars Scout Program. The scientists conducting the mission will use instruments aboard the Phoenix lander to search for environments suitable for microbial life on Mars, and to research the history of water there. Phoenix launched successfully on August 4, 2007, and is scheduled to land on Mars on May 25, 2008 during a special webcast[citation needed]. The multi-agency program is headed by the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona, under the direction of NASA. The program is a partnership of universities in the United States, Canada, Switzerland, Denmark, Germany and the United Kingdom, NASA, the Canadian Space Agency, and the aerospace industry. Phoenix is planned to land in the planet's water-ice-rich northern polar region and, if this is successful, will use its robotic arm to dig into the Arctic terrain.[1]
If successful, Phoenix will be the sixth lander to successfully touch down on Mars and the first since Viking 1 & 2 in 1976 to land using powered descent.
Summary Provided Under GNU Free Documentation LicenseLive From The Blogosphere!
If you are reading this, then my mission is probably over. This final entry is one that I asked be posted after my mission team announces they've lost.
Over the last few weeks here on Giz the Mars Phoenix Lander already a prolific Twitterer became the first spacecraft.
After more than five months on the Red Planet, the Phoenix Lander shut itself down earlier this month due to lack of sunlight to fuel its solar-powered batteries. Read this blog post by Daniel Terdiman on Gaming and Culture.
Our friend, the loved and loving Mars Phoenix lander has gone quietly into that long, good night once and for all. Even though we joyfully joined the lander on its adventures as it Tweeted from beyond the stratosphere, and thrilled at ...
is correct, including the use of the lowercase "l" in "lander", as its title is "Phoenix" and it is a simple "lander" being used by the "Mars Phoenix Lander" project. And the project's name is used correctly in the article's title, ...
NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander bit the dust today (no pun intended). After five months performing scientific experiments that included digging, scooping, baking, "sniffing", and "tasting" the Martian soil, the seasonal changes in sunlight ...
Yesterday, NASA announced that the Mars Phoenix Lander has died. Okay, they said that the lander had “ceased communications” and that the lander had “finish[ed] successful work,” both of which are merely euphemisms for its tragic death ...
12 comments to "The Mars Phoenix Lander Says Goodnight". DOJ November 11th, 2008 at 1:13 am. It'd be pretty cool if Phoenix woke up next Martian spring. SenorMysterioso November 11th, 2008 at 2:26 am. it would be very cool ...
Mars Phoenix Lander Finishes Successful Work On Red Planet. November 10, 2008 -- NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has ceased communications after operating for more than five months. As anticipated, seasonal decline in sunshine at the robot's ...
Space | After five months of scraping and digging into the soil at a lonely spot near the Martian north pole, NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander has finally succumbed to the co.
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