Phoenix

A graphic image that represents the Phoenix mission

Full Name: Phoenix

Phase: Operating

Launch Date: August 04, 2007

Mission Project Home Page: http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/index.php

Program(s): Mars Exploration


Named for the mythological bird that rose out of the fire to be reborn, Phoenix is the new Lander for NASA’s next Mars mission scheduled to land in the Martian northern plains in May 2008.

The Mission has two bold objectives: (1) study the history of water in the Martian arctic and (2) search for evidence of a habitable zone and assess the biological potential of the ice-soil boundary.

Mars is a cold desert planet with no liquid water on its surface. But in the Martian arctic, water ice lurks just below ground level. Discoveries made by the Mars Odyssey Orbiter in 2002 show large amounts of subsurface water ice in the northern arctic. This information dovetails with other scientific information sent back to Earth from other Mars missions suggesting that water played an important role in Mars past.  The Phoenix lander targets the northern circumpolar region using a robotic arm to dig through the protective top-soil layer to study the soil and water-ice below.

The Phoenix platform carries a scientific laboratory.  Samples of soil and water-ice will be delivered by the robotic arm to instruments on the platform where sample chemistry will be explored by a host of sophisticated scientific instruments.  As Phoenix digs deeper into the Martian subsurface it will be able to literally peer back in time by analyzing successively deeper layers of soil and permafrost.

Phoenix will also deliver images from the Marian surface on all different scales.  Its Surface Stereo Imager will deliver panoramic stereoscopic images of the surface.  A camera on the robotic arm will transmit close up images of the soil and water-ice found in the trench dug by the robotic arm.  Microscopes in Phoenix’s laboratory will take images of the microscopic structure of the delivered samples.

No study of water on Mars would be complete without studying the Martian atmosphere.  Phoenix has a weather station that will deliver weather reports from Mars and allow the spacecraft to investigate the properties of the atmosphere and clouds high above the spacecraft.

Phoenix will provide an important contribution to the overall Mars science strategy of "Follow the Water". It will be instrumental in contributing to the four science goals of NASA's long-term Mars Exploration Program.

  • Determine whether Life ever arose on Mars
  • Characterize the Climate of Mars
  • Characterize the Geology of Mars
  • Prepare for Human Exploration

The complement of the Phoenix spacecraft and its scientific instruments are ideally suited to uncover clues to the geologic history and biological potential of the Martian arctic.  Phoenix will be the first mission to return data from either polar region.