[meteorite-list] NASA Phoenix Lander Bakes Sample, Arm Digs Deeper
From: Pete Shugar <pshugar_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 11:54:31 -0500 Message-ID: <000601c8d09a$d21176c0$0201a8c0_at_laptop> (Quote) Born from the ashes it may be, but Phoenix will die in the cold. > It's going into summer in the Martian Arctic; the mission lifetime is > about 150 days. Phoenix won't survive winter.(end quote) When all is said and done, it's still an expensive trash can. I just hope that enough is learned to make it worth the trip. Pete ----- Original Message ----- From: <lebofsky at lpl.arizona.edu> To: "Sterling K. Webb" <sterling_k_webb at sbcglobal.net> Cc: "Pete Shugar" <pshugar at clearwire.net>; <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>; <mexicodoug at aim.com> Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2008 5:37 AM Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] NASA Phoenix Lander Bakes Sample, Arm Digs Deeper > Hello Sterling: > > I think that it was a software failure that doomed Mars Polar Lander: > > When the spacecraft sensed that the vehicle had landed, then the engines > were to cut off. This was done by noting that the landing legs flexed > (sprung back as a shock absorber) as the ship touched down. > > However, as it turned out, when the legs were deployed, having springs, > guess what, they sprung back a little. The engines sensed this as "we are > on the ground" and not "oh, the legs just deployed," and so the engines > turned off at 40 meters altitude, making the landing not so soft. > > Larry > > On Tue, June 17, 2008 11:51 pm, Sterling K. Webb wrote: >> Hi, Pete, List, >> >> >> This mission was named Phoenix in recognition >> of the fact that like the mythical Phoenix, it rose from the ashes of the >> dead! Once upon a time, there were two Mars missions that died: the 2001 >> Mars Surveyor >> lander was cancelled in 2000, and the Mars Polar Lander was lost on Mars >> in >> 1999. >> >> >> Demonstrating the inscrutable wisdom that politicians, >> beaurocrats, and authorities often possess that we lowly groundlings >> lack, >> the 2001 Mars Surveyor Lander was canceled after it was already built and >> paid for. (Anybody remember the Superconducting Super Collider?) >> >> At any rate, the 2001 Mars Surveyor Lander had been >> kept in storage at Lockheed Martin clean room in Sunnyvale. And there >> were >> extra "stay-at-home" duplicates of some instruments for the Polar Lander, >> and there was a bit here and there, and there were projects without a >> vehicle or hope of getting another one... >> >> Upshot: for a lousy $386 million, which includes the launch >> and all tips for room service, You The Taxpayer get a whole new Mars >> Mission. Quit whining. For comparison, we spend >> $343 million each and every day in Iraq doing whatever it is >> that we're doing there. >> >> Actually, I lied. Phoenix needed an extra $31 million beyond >> the budget of $386 million and was almost cancelled over it. The >> altimeter >> was from the Mars Polar Lander (you know, the one that crashed). It seems >> that, hmm... a faulty altimeter may have been to blame for that. >> >> It's taken from the one used in F-16 fighter planes. Some >> software problems on the F-16 altimeter were fixed, but the altimeter for >> Phoenix did not get the software upgrade. They >> spent about six months fixing the gizmo, driving up costs. And, hey! It >> worked, didn't it? >> >> Additionally, they had to pay for searching for a boulder-free >> landing spot, using the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter which, yes, charges >> for >> its services, even to other missions, because every spot they picked had >> boulders. There's a helluva lot of boulders on Mars... >> >> <quote> The partnership developing the Phoenix mission >> includes: the University of Arizona, NASA's Jet Propulsion >> Laboratory, Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver and >> the Canadian Space Agency, which is providing weather instruments. Peter >> H. >> Smith of the University of Arizona, Lunar >> and Planetary Laboratory heads the Phoenix mission. <unquote> >> >> Thanks. >> >> >> Born from the ashes it may be, but Phoenix will die in the cold. >> It's going into summer in the Martian Arctic; the mission lifetime is >> about 150 days. Phoenix won't survive winter. >> >> I also notice news people describing the Phoenix as having >> landed at Mars's "North Pole," even people on this List. If you were >> aliens >> going to land on Earth, would you land on the dead center of Antarctica? >> Why? >> >> >> Phoenix is on the southern edge of the "Boreal Vastness" >> (translating from the Latin name); it is above the Martian Arctic >> Circle, barely (68.35 deg North). For a location comparison >> by latitude, think of landing in the Northwest Territories of Canada. The >> "Boreal Vastness" is a flat featureless low-lying >> that covers about the upper third of Mars; many think it is an ancient >> sea >> bed. >> >> Your criticisms might be to the point if we belonged to a >> species and lived in a culture that made rational and intelligent >> long-term >> plans to do the things that are truly essential and important to them. >> >> If you know of such a place, let me know. >> >> >> I sincerely hope you can convince somebody to land a >> multi-ton rompin' rover with nuclear eight-wheel drive, power take-off >> drills on both ends, linear laboratory analysis machines with continuous >> pass-through of Martian samples and 18 experiments online in each one >> (let's have four of'em) and >> a sample return rocket that sends 100 kg of Martian samples up to Martian >> orbit to be returned to Earth. >> >> Let's have two, if you're in the mood... >> >> >> >> Sterling K. Webb >> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> > Received on Tue 17 Jun 2008 12:54:31 PM PDT |
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