| Piú viste - From Ashes to Eternity: the Phoenix Mars Mission |

B-PIA09946-2.jpgPossible Landing Ellipses for Phoenix (2)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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C-Phoenix-PolarDunes.jpgPossible Northern Scenarios (1) - Dark Dunes and Ice60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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PHOE-SOL004-PIA10726.jpgDark Arctic Panorama (MULTISPECTRUM; credits: Lunexit)60 visiteNotizia dell'ultima ora: malfunzionamento di alcuni circuiti del Phoenix Lander. Il Sito NASA dedicato è, al momento, non raggiungibile.
Ricerca di "Interesse e Pathos" o "Problema Reale Grave"? Pubblicheremo le novità non appena possibile.
Caption NASA:"Typical view if you were standing on Mars and slowly turned around for a look. Starting at the North, SSI sees its shadow and turns its head viewing Solar Arrays, the Lander Deck and landscape. Note very few rocks on the hummocky terrain and network of troughs, typical of Polar Surfaces here on Earth".MareKromium
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PHOE-SOL005-PIA10741.jpgIce under Phoenix?!? - Sol 560 visiteCaption NASA:"The Robotic Arm Camera on NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander captured this image underneath the Lander on the fifth Martian Day, or Sol, of the mission. Descent thrusters on the bottom of the Lander are visible at the top of the image.
This view from the north side of the Lander toward the southern leg shows smooth surfaces cleared from overlying soil by the rocket exhaust during landing. One exposed edge of the underlying material was seen in Sol 4 images, but the newer image reveals a greater extent of it.
The abundance of excavated smooth and level surfaces adds evidence to a hypothesis that the underlying material is an ice table covered by a thin blanket of soil. The bright-looking surface material in the center, where the image is partly overexposed, may not be inherently brighter than the foreground material in shadow".MareKromium
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PHOE-SOL007-lg_1362-1363-1364.jpgFrost? Salt? Or just over-saturation?!? - Sol 7 (Superdefinition; credits: Dr G. Barca)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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PHOE-SOL009-lg_2964.jpgIce or Salt? - Sol 9 (MULTISPECTRUM; credits: Lunexit)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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PHOE-SOL012-lg_3352-A.jpgThe Lander and the Surface - Sol 12 (Appproximate Colors; credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech)60 visiteCaption NASA:"This image shows a view from NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander's Stereo Surface Imager's left eye after delivery of soil to the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer (TEGA), taken on the 12th Martian Day after landing (Sol 12, June 6, 2008).
Soil is visible on both sides of the open doors of TEGA's #4 oven. Sensors inside the device indicate no soil passed through the screen and into the oven". MareKromium
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PHOE-SOL015-lg_4864.jpgVastitas Borealis: Back-Shell and Heat-Shield - Sol 15 (credits: NASA/Univ. of Arizona)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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PHOE-SOL022-PIA10905.jpgSnow-White - Sol 22 (MULTISPECTRUM; credits: Lunexit)60 visiteCaption NASA:"NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander began excavating a new trench, dubbed "Snow White", in a patch of Martian Soil located near the center of a polygonal surface feature, nicknamed "Cheshire Cat".
The trench is about 2 cm (0,8") deep and 30 cm (about 12") long.
The "dump pile" is located at the top of the trench, the side farthest away from the Lander, and has been dubbed "Croquet Ground". The digging site has been named "Wonderland".
At this early stage of digging, the Phoenix team did not expect to find any of the white material seen in the first trench, now called "Dodo-Goldilocks". That trench showed white material at a depth of about 5 cm (approx. 2"). More digging of Snow White is planned for coming Martian Days.
The dark portion of this image is the shadow of the Lander's Solar Panel; the bright areas within this region are not in shadow.
Snow White was dug on Sol 22 (June 17, 2008) with Phoenix's Robotic Arm. This picture was acquired on the same day by the lander's Surface Stereo Imager. This image has been enhanced to brighten shaded areas". MareKromium
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PHOE-SOL031-lg7754-7770-7771-2.jpgAnemometer - Sol 31 (natural colors; credits: Dr G. Barca)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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PHOE-SOL031-lg7811-7823-7824.jpgThe "Trench" - Sol 31 (natural colors; credits: Dr G. Barca)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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PHOE-SOL035-lg8635-8642-8643.jpgCircuits - Sol 35 (natural colors; credits: Dr G. Barca)60 visitenessun commentoMareKromium
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