Mars probe cleared for landing

Nasa confident of successful touchdown

Iain Thomson

Nasa has cleared the Phoenix Mars Lander for touchdown on the Martian polar icecap on 26 May.

The craft is now preparing for the final series of actions that will slow it from around 13,000mph before it descends to the surface.

Advertisement

Once there it will sample the North polar ice cap, try to find water and analyse it for signs of life.

Dr Tom Pike, who heads up the UK Phoenix team at Imperial College London, said: "This is a very exciting mission which provides us with the first chance to reach and analyse Martian water, frozen and stored just beneath the surface.

"Our sophisticated imaging and chemical analysis tools will allow us to look at the highest level of detail of any mission to date.

"This should give us the clearest indication so far as to whether Mars could have hosted life at any point in its history."

This is not a trip to grandma's house

Ed Weiler Nasa Science Mission Directorate

The probe will use the friction of the Martian atmosphere to slow it down while sheltering behind a heat shield. At 7.8 miles high it will deploy a parachute before descending the final half mile on rocket motors.

"This is not a trip to grandma's house. Putting a spacecraft safely on Mars is hard and risky," said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for Nasa's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. "Fewer than half the attempts have succeeded. "

Once on the ground the probe should be able to operate for five months until autumn sets in and the solar panels lose their effectiveness.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Tags:

Do you agree?

Further reading

Asteroid

Nasa plans manned mission to asteroid

Bruce Willis thankfully not going

Nasa to fire up SGI supercomputer

20,480-core Altix ICE system capable of 245 trillion operations per second

Nasa plans 5G comms 'nanosats'

'Constellations' of tiny satellites to provide global communications network

Schoolboy corrects Nasa on asteroid strike

Space agency admits he may be right

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

Motorola logo

Motorola demos femtocell hardware

Device combines femtocell, SIP softphone and digital photoframe

HTC Hero

Video: HTC Hero launch

Handset maker unveils its latest Android-based smartphone

IT white papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Poll

Poll: Summer smartphones

Poll: Summer smartphones

Which smartphone will you be taking to the beach this summer?

View poll results

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Spotlight

Overheating iPhones: Sorry I'll have to call you back, I'm in a heat wave

The heat wave may have broken in the UK, but...

Oracle

Oracle set to cut 1,000 staff in Europe

Firm sheds six per cent of European workforce to improve...

Cooling towers

Recession fuels growth in green IT initiatives

Green IT and cost-effective IT no longer mutually exclusive, says...

NXP showcases the future of silicon

We need to move "from living faster to living better",...

Primary Navigation