Phoenix Mars Lander Appears to Be Dead

Monday, November 10, 2008 | FoxNews.com
By Andrea Thompson

    Facebook StumbleUpon Digg Post to MySpace!
  • Print
  • Share

The end seems to have finally come for NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander mission at the planet's north pole, scientists said Monday.

"At this time we're pretty convinced that the vehicle is no longer available for us to use," said Phoenix project manager Barry Goldstein of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Mission controllers lost touch with the lander on Nov. 2.

That "was actually the last time we actually heard form Phoenix," Goldstein said.

The spacecraft has been studying the arctic surface of the red planet for just over five months, since landing there May 25.

• Click here for more photos.

• Click here to visit FOXNews.com's Space Center.

During the course of its mission, Phoenix scooped up samples of the Martian dirt and subsurface water ice at its arctic landing site and analyzed them for signs of the planet's past potential habitability.

Phoenix touched down on the northern plains of a region of Mars known as Vastitas Borealis. The area is at a latitude on Mars equivalent to northern Alaska on Earth.

The lander's power supplies -- it gets its electricity from solar panels -- have been steadily diminishing in recent weeks as the sun dips toward the horizon with the approach of fall and winter to Mars' northern hemisphere.

Phoenix went into its inactive safe mode briefly on Oct. 28, then restarted once the sun came up the following day.

Phoenix would lose power or "brown out" at night, then wake up again when sunlight hit its solar arrays the next morning.

Related Stories

Photo Essays

Mission engineers tried to turn off any unnecessary instruments and heaters to keep the batteries alive, but "we were unsuccessful in keeping the batteries from browning out," Goldstein said.

Phoenix has effectively ended all science operations, though the team will keep listening for any signals from the spacecraft relayed through the Mars orbiters.

Mission engineers had originally hoped the lander would last through the end of November, acting as a weather station and using its camera to photograph the change of season.

Though no one on the team expects that Phoenix will once again live up to its name and rise again, there's always the "hope that the vehicle will surprise us again," Goldstein said.

Copyright © 2008 Imaginova Corp. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


    Facebook StumbleUpon Digg Post to MySpace!
  • Print
  • Share

FOX NEWS VIDEOS



ADVERTISEMENT

most active


ADVERTISEMENT

TECH TUESDAY

ONLY ON FOX

  • Candy From a Baby

    Popular children's Web site Neopets under attack by hackers after parents' financial data
  • Need Some Weed?

    Just check Twitter, where California pot sellers are legally advertising their wares
  • China's Google Slam

    Beijing blocks search engine, Gmail in move against online porn; some suspect it's really to stifle dissent
  • Hanging By a Thread

    Digital 'fly-by-wire' technology in modern aircraft may make them less safe
  • Apple's AT&T Problem

    U.S. carrier not ready to roll out new features coming to iPhone users in other countries
  • Sex Searches Strike Out

    Microsoft's Bing is great for finding porn -- but not if you live in China, India or an Islamic country
  • Virtual Graduation

    Private college hosting ceremony for online students in 'Second Life' virtual world
  • No iPhone Killer

    Review: Palm Pre is a very good smartphone, but no match for the champ
  • 'Wow' Becomes 'What?'

    E3 EXPO REPORT: Nintendo blows it with lackluster rollout of weird Wii gadgets, games
  • Making Wii Look Weak

    E3 EXPO REPORT: Microsoft's new motion-sensor for Xbox 360 blows Nintendo away
  • Bada Bing!

    Microsoft's new search engine plays hardcore porn videos right on results page with flick of button
  • No Scientologists Allowed

    Wikipedia blocks computers linked to Church of Scientology after repeated breaches
  • White-Roof Whitewash?

    Energy secretary's proposal to paint buildings white to fight climate change puzzles experts
  • Shape of Things to Come

    Secretive Pentagon agency is behind lots of high-tech weapons -- but will budget cuts dull its leading edge?