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Sunday, June 22, 2008 | Science : Physics and Chemistry | print version Print | Comments

Document White Patches Found in Mars Trench Are Ice, Scientists Say

by Kenneth Chang

Reposted from:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/20/science/space/20mars.html?_r=1&ref=science&oref=slogin

After a decade of shouting, "Follow the water!" in its exploration of Mars, NASA can finally say that one of its spacecraft has reached out, touched water ice and scooped it up.

Now, scientists will be able to tackle the main question they hope to answer: Did the ice ever melt and turn Mars into a habitable place?

In a photograph released Thursday evening of a trench that the Phoenix Mars lander has dug into the Martian soil, some white patches that were seen earlier in the week have shrunk, and eight small chunks have disappeared. Until now, scientists were not sure if the white material was ice or some kind of salt.

When exposed to air, water ice can change into water vapor, a process known as sublimation. Salt, on the other hand, is not capable of such a vanishing act.

"It must be ice," said Dr. Peter H. Smith of the University of Arizona, the mission's principal investigator. "The whole science team thinks this. I think we feel this is definite proof that these are little chunks of icy material."

Water ice on the surface of Mars is not a new discovery. Scientists have known that the permanent ice cap at Mars's north pole is made of ice. In 2002, measurements by the orbiting Mars Odyssey spacecraft found evidence for vastly larger quantities of ice not far beneath the surface.

In light of the Odyssey findings, the Phoenix mission was designed to land in the northern arctic plains and dig trenches in the soil into the ice layer, believed to be a few inches under the surface. Still, to actually see the ice was "tremendously exciting," Dr. Smith said. "One of the biggest fears I've had on the mission is that we'd dig and dig and never find anything."

Liquid water transforms minerals, so impurities in the ice could tell much about the climate history. While Mars is too cold for liquid water, in the past, if its axis occasionally tipped over, the polar regions might have warmed above freezing during the summer.

Liquid water is an essential ingredient for life, and this area may have been, at least intermittently, a habitable environment in Mars's geologically recent past, in the past 10 million years or so.

One of the experiments on the Phoenix consists of tiny ovens to heat samples of the soil and analyze the vapors released. Data from the first run of the experiment, conducted over the past week, is to be downloaded from the spacecraft on Friday.

The Phoenix dug the trench on Sunday, dislodging the eight chunks, and it took another photograph of the trench on Thursday.

Meanwhile, digging in a different trench on Thursday, the scoop at the end of the Phoenix's robotic arm hit a hard surface — possibly a hard icy layer — that did not yield after three efforts. The hard layer is at the same depth as the white material in the first trench.

The robotic arm has a scraper and, if necessary, a small drill to break off pieces of the hard material for analysis in one of the ovens, which would determine the chemical composition.

The eventful findings on Thursday follow a day when no science work was performed, because of a glitch with the Phoenix's computer software.

On Tuesday, the spacecraft's computer memory filled up with thousands of copies of housekeeping data, which prevented science data like photographs from being saved overnight, and the photographs were lost. Engineers spent Wednesday diagnosing the problem.

Comments 1 - 11 of 11 |

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1. Comment #197481 by mordacious1 on June 22, 2008 at 8:29 am

ah, now if I ever make it to Mars, I can take a bottle of scotch.

Other Comments by mordacious1

2. Comment #197549 by rod-the-farmer on June 22, 2008 at 10:09 am

 avatarHere is the latest weather from Mars

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/marsweather/

Other Comments by rod-the-farmer

3. Comment #197717 by moderndaythomas on June 22, 2008 at 2:30 pm

 avatar
Here is the latest weather from Mars


-32 Celsius. That's a balmy Winnipeg summer day where I was raised.

Where I used to walk uphill both ways to go to school.

Edit: some might think that I'm serious, Winnipeg gets down to -50 at times in the winter, not the summer.

Other Comments by moderndaythomas

4. Comment #197801 by adk on June 22, 2008 at 5:34 pm

 avatarThis is totally cool, so exciting!

Other Comments by adk

5. Comment #197814 by bluebird on June 22, 2008 at 5:48 pm

 avatarThis is the kind of story we like to discuss around the dinner table---yea, way cool!

I love the organic look of one of the (presumably?) ice patches (Snow Queen)http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080612.html

Other Comments by bluebird

6. Comment #197833 by moderndaythomas on June 22, 2008 at 6:13 pm

 avatarAnd maybe, just maybe a hint of life.

This is real drama. As I've said on an earlier thread, what would that life be like?

Simple, yes but what about it's genes?
Would they be strings of nucleotides?
And if so, how similar and related to the life found here?

Other Comments by moderndaythomas

7. Comment #197941 by Manson on June 23, 2008 at 1:28 am

Liquid water is an essential ingredient for life...


Life as we know it.

Other Comments by Manson

8. Comment #197992 by clodhopper on June 23, 2008 at 3:14 am

 avatar
some white patches that were seen earlier in the week have shrunk, and eight small chunks have disappeared


..that's where my undies went! The chunks are nothing to do with me though...mus be rocks.

Other Comments by clodhopper

9. Comment #198256 by Vaal on June 23, 2008 at 12:53 pm

 avatarThis is why I love science.

There is a great piece on the BBC website about an Australian amateur astronomer observing a huge storm on Saturn. The guy shows such unfettered enthusiasm, it is a delight to listen to him.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7468832.stm

His telescope makes my little ETX 125 reflector look like a toy. Man, I would give my right arm to live under those wonderful dark clear skies.

Other Comments by Vaal

10. Comment #198430 by Count von Count on June 23, 2008 at 10:45 pm

 avatar

mordacious1 -
ah, now if I ever make it to Mars, I can take a bottle of scotch.

Surely, if you were on Mars, it would be occasion to take it neat. =)

Other Comments by Count von Count

11. Comment #214766 by beanson on July 20, 2008 at 9:54 pm

 avatarI don't understand NASA.
They go up there with a brand new probe presumably replete with sensors to discover new things about the composition of the soil but as soon as they get there they start guessing based on an assessment of photographic evidence. So we hear: "It must be ice, we saw lumps in the photos that appear to have sublimated, so they can't be salt". Surely they have a sensor to detect water- why then don't they just apply it then?

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