NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander got its
first (very) close-up look at Martian soil, scientists said Friday.
Phoenix used its robotic arm scoop to deliver
a sample of the soil around the landing site to its optical microscope,
which can zoom in on soil particles as small as 2 microns across (the size of
some bacteria) — the smallest scale ever seen on Mars.
"This is the highest resolution
image of the soil of Mars," said the mission's geology team leader, Tom
Pike of University College London. "This is the first time we've reached
down to this level."
The microscope images show a wide
variety of particle sizes, colors and types in the soil. One of the particles
viewed through the microscope is just 50 microns across, a little less than
diameter of human hair. It is greenish in one part, which Pike says could be
olivine, a mineral seen elsewhere on Mars. The other part of the particles
"the very characteristic orange color" of the Martian soil as a
whole, Pike said.
Another particle is black, glassy
and more rounded in its shape. "This may very well be a volcanic
glass," Pike said.
The microscope
images also showed that the clumpy tendencies of the soil go right down to
the microscopic level. The green-and-orange particle is actually "a clump
of even finer particles," Pike said.
"It's obviously a very sticky
material right down to the finest scale," he added.
The tendency of the soil particles
to stick together has caused some problems for the mission. When the first soil
sample was delivered to the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer (TEGA) on June 6,
it got stuck behind the screened entrance to the instrument. After using a
vibrator on the machine, the soil eventually loosened and fell
into TEGA. Results from TEGA's first analysis
should be sent back to mission scientists next week.
To get around the clumping problem,
scientists are now using a "sprinkle" technique to deliver samples.
The scoop on the robotic arm is tilted forward, and then a rasp at the end
(designed for scraping up hard ice) is run to dribble the soil into the
instrument, like a salt shaker. This was the technique used to deliver the
sample to the microscope.
Phoenix's microscope hasn't been the only
busy instrument aboard the lander. The craft's
stereoscopic imager has continued taking high-resolution, color images of the
area around the landing site (these will eventually be stitched together into a
360-degree panorama).
The robotic arm continued digging
into its first two trenches, Dodo and Baby Bear, revealing more of the
unidentified white material seen under the surface layer of regolith.
Mission scientists are still debating whether
the white material is ice, or a layer of salt minerals that could have formed
above the ice layer.
To find out what the material is,
"we need to gather a sample of it and put it in our instruments,"
said Phoenix
principal investigator Peter Smith of the University of Arizona.
"We have just the right instruments on the surface here to answer those
questions."
TEGA in particular will be useful:
It is extremely sensitive to water, so if the white material is ice, TEGA
should sniff it out right away.
The meteorological instruments have
also continued observing the Martian atmosphere. Images of the air above Phoenix as well as lidar
readings show that "there's lots of dust in the atmosphere," said Phoenix science team
member Nilton Renno.