The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars
This presentation was part of the session : Opening - Thursday Parallel Sessions - June 26 Sixth International Planetary Probe Workshop Phoenix will land on the arctic plains of Mars on May 25, 2008. The team of the University of Arizona, the Jet propulsion Lab, and Lockheed Martin have spent a cons...
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ftgeorgiatech:oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/26407 2023-05-15T15:05:39+02:00 The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars Smith, Peter University of Arizona. Lunar and Planetary Laboratory 2008-06-26 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1853/26407 unknown Georgia Institute of Technology IPPW08. Opening - Thursday Parallel Sessions - June 26 http://hdl.handle.net/1853/26407 Mars science Planetary probes Text Proceedings 2008 ftgeorgiatech 2022-12-26T18:38:37Z This presentation was part of the session : Opening - Thursday Parallel Sessions - June 26 Sixth International Planetary Probe Workshop Phoenix will land on the arctic plains of Mars on May 25, 2008. The team of the University of Arizona, the Jet propulsion Lab, and Lockheed Martin have spent a considerable effort in orchestrating a robust approach, entry, descent, and landing sequence of events. Contingency maneuvers are planned for every critical event such that the team can respond rapidly with tested procedures to any potential anomaly. Once on the surface, we will evaluate the power levels, communication links, and thermal state to assess the health of the lander and its ability to complete our mission goals. By the time of the conference, panoramic images and the results of the analysis of the first surface samples of soil should be available. In addition, the weather patterns will be monitored during the active summer season. The mission will continue for several months while we dig down to the ice boundary and sample both ice and soil to understand the mineralogy, chemistry, and the potential for habitability of this unexplored region of Mars. NASA Conference Object Arctic Georgia Institute of Technology: SMARTech - Scholarly Materials and Research at Georgia Tech Arctic |
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Georgia Institute of Technology: SMARTech - Scholarly Materials and Research at Georgia Tech |
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Mars science Planetary probes |
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Mars science Planetary probes Smith, Peter The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars |
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Mars science Planetary probes |
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This presentation was part of the session : Opening - Thursday Parallel Sessions - June 26 Sixth International Planetary Probe Workshop Phoenix will land on the arctic plains of Mars on May 25, 2008. The team of the University of Arizona, the Jet propulsion Lab, and Lockheed Martin have spent a considerable effort in orchestrating a robust approach, entry, descent, and landing sequence of events. Contingency maneuvers are planned for every critical event such that the team can respond rapidly with tested procedures to any potential anomaly. Once on the surface, we will evaluate the power levels, communication links, and thermal state to assess the health of the lander and its ability to complete our mission goals. By the time of the conference, panoramic images and the results of the analysis of the first surface samples of soil should be available. In addition, the weather patterns will be monitored during the active summer season. The mission will continue for several months while we dig down to the ice boundary and sample both ice and soil to understand the mineralogy, chemistry, and the potential for habitability of this unexplored region of Mars. NASA |
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University of Arizona. Lunar and Planetary Laboratory |
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Conference Object |
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Smith, Peter |
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Smith, Peter |
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Smith, Peter |
title |
The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars |
title_short |
The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars |
title_full |
The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars |
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The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars |
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The Phoenix Mission Lands on Mars |
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phoenix mission lands on mars |
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Georgia Institute of Technology |
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2008 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/1853/26407 |
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Arctic |
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Arctic |
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Arctic |
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IPPW08. Opening - Thursday Parallel Sessions - June 26 http://hdl.handle.net/1853/26407 |
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