by iamlucky13 » Tue Sep 25, 2007 12:03 am
I just saw the last question on the thread and thought i'd resurrect it briefly.
The plan is to dig at least 1.5 feet in multiple locations, although since the arm is 8 feet long (a lot of that length will be used to reach away from the lander body), I suspect they'll be able to push a little beyond that. The further you go down, however, the harder it gets to dig, especially if they hit ice.
I'm not quite sure I understand what ambiguous results you're referring to. I would guess the Viking biological experiment? The Viking landers looked for strong signs of life and didn't find them. What made it controversial is that some of the results have been interpreted as weak signs of life, but that remains a topic of debate. It didn't conclusively disprove life on Mars, but by failing to find it the case was weakened. The Phoenix science will be similar, but a little more in depth. Rather than looking explicitly for life, by learning more about the chemical composition of the soil it will help constrain the conditions under which life might exist or have existed on Mars, and also help determine the history of water on the planet.
It's not exactly a crap shoot. Assuming it operates successfully, the mission will either confirm their theories about the soil chemistry of Mars and the abundance of water and other molecules, or force them to rewrite their theories. Either case is progress.
I just saw the last question on the thread and thought i'd resurrect it briefly.
The plan is to dig at least 1.5 feet in multiple locations, although since the arm is 8 feet long (a lot of that length will be used to reach away from the lander body), I suspect they'll be able to push a little beyond that. The further you go down, however, the harder it gets to dig, especially if they hit ice.
I'm not quite sure I understand what ambiguous results you're referring to. I would guess the Viking biological experiment? The Viking landers looked for strong signs of life and didn't find them. What made it controversial is that some of the results have been interpreted as weak signs of life, but that remains a topic of debate. It didn't conclusively disprove life on Mars, but by failing to find it the case was weakened. The Phoenix science will be similar, but a little more in depth. Rather than looking explicitly for life, by learning more about the chemical composition of the soil it will help constrain the conditions under which life might exist or have existed on Mars, and also help determine the history of water on the planet.
It's not exactly a crap shoot. Assuming it operates successfully, the mission will either confirm their theories about the soil chemistry of Mars and the abundance of water and other molecules, or force them to rewrite their theories. Either case is progress.