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Seven rounds
of shaking later, the Mars Phoenix Lander finally got some soil into one of its
tiny ovens.
The
“This soil
is unlike anything we tested
For the
past few days, the lander’s science team has been scrambling to redesign
digging commands in response to the news that the soil sample delivered to oven
number 4 did not initially strain into the TEGA instrument as planned. The work-around,
Smith said, was to come up with he called the salt-shaker or sprinkler method.
“Last night
we ran the vibrator for a seventh time,” said Boynton of the
But when the
scientists received data back from the lander Wednesday morning, they learned
that the program sent to command the shaking had terminated early. That usually
happens if something malfunctions, but “we looked at the data and the fact was
that dirt finally did start to flow,” Boynton said. “We did get a full oven.”
The news came
just after the team had relayed up the lander’s commands for the following day,
June 12. So not until the next scheduled communication can the team instruct the
TEGA oven to close its doors and begin baking the newly acquired sample. Boynton
said the team may have preliminary results Friday, but full analysis of the 30-milliliter
sample will take at least a week.
If
everything goes well, the scientists could have their first microscopic look at
the Martian soil as early as Thursday, June 12, Smith added. He said the
commands sent on June 11 instructed the robotic arm to capture a soil sample for
the optical microscope in one of the lander’s other instrument’s, the MECA, or
Microscopy, Electrochemistry, and Conductivity Analyzer.
The optical
microscope can collect data about the sizes, shapes and magnetic properties of
the Martian soil particles; distinguish different mineral grains; and determine
the individual soil particles’ colors.
The
microscopic views will provide the
Later, TEGA
and MECA wet chemistry instruments will analyze how much water or ice is in the
soil, its mineral content and what exactly makes the soil samples so clumpy.
“Without
the data, our ideas are not much more than guesses,” Boynton said. But with a
full oven, the team knows they can now make more than guesses. That why the
scientists took a few minutes to cheer and dance to the ’70s favorite “(Shake,
Shake, Shake) Shake Your Booty” Wednesday when Boynton announced the good news
about filling a TEGA cell.
From now on,
“shake, shake, shake” will be normal procedure: The robotic arm, Smith said,
will scoop the material and, with its crank, hold the sample in the scoop at a steady
angle and vibrate it by running the motorized rasp located beneath the scoop. This
“thumper,” as Smith calls the rasp, was originally designed to scrape at the
Martian surface. Now, it will help the arm gently jostle some material out of
the scoop to the target below.
“It’s like
putting flour in a sieve,” Smith said. “Sometimes you have to bang on it to get
it to go through,” but then the soil will come down in a “rain of particles.”
The trick is to get that soil rain over the entry point and ensure that enough of
it gets into the instrument, he added.
Should the method be equally successful delivering samples to the lander’s microscope, the team will position the robotic arm to dig more trenches in and take more samples from a spot dubbed Wonderland.
Watch an animation of the robotic arm sprinkle soil onto the Phoenix Lander's instruments:
Found in: Astronomy and Planetary Science
