Makeshift
to Mars
RSC
The
red planet has claimed many a plucky spacecraft. Richard Corfield discovers how
Nasa's latest attempt hopes to overcome the odds with a different approach
It
is easy to forget in these heady days of the Mars exploration rovers Spirit and
Opportunity - which have exceeded their design lifetime by a factor of ten - that
Mars has a long history of claiming spacecraft. In fact only half of the missions
ever sent to the red planet have been successful. The rest, for one reason or
another, have failed.
This
month a new spacecraft will once again test the Martian odds when the Phoenix
lander launches from Cape Canaveral Air Force Base in Florida, US, and tries to
land close to the red planet's north pole. If successful, it will be the first
craft to reach either of the Martian poles. Its mission is twofold: to search
for environments suitable for past or present microbial life and to investigate
the history of water in the high latitudes of Mars.
The
probe carries a piece of equipment that should raise the arm hairs of any red-blooded
Englishman - it is the instrument that we tried and failed to land on Mars aboard
the Marie Celeste of lost Martian landers, Beagle 2. The Tega instrument (Thermal
and Evolved Gas Analyser) is a mass spectrometer, able to identify organic molecules
that could prove to be evidence of life on Mars.
It's
on America's tortured brow
Phoenix
is well named - it is an attempt to rise from the ashes of one of the most controversial
periods of Nasa's chequered history. In the spring of 1992 Dan Goldin took over
as the Chief Administrator of Nasa declaring that the era of 'big space' was over
and that, in future, the biggest space agency in the world would explore the planets
with what he dubbed the 'faster, better, cheaper' approach. For much of the 1990s
it seemed to be working, with low-budget missions such as the 1997 Pathfinder
mission and its miniature Sojourner rover a spectacular success that paved the
way for the hugely successful Mars Exploration Rovers still trundling the sands
of Mars today.
Then,
in 1998, Nasa launched Mars Surveyor 98 consisting of the Mars Climate Orbiter
and the Mars Polar Lander. Their joint mission was to explore the climate of Mars
and also the potential of the poles as oases of liquid water and, possibly, life.
But the Climate Orbiter was lost when it entered the atmosphere of Mars at too
low an altitude and the lander was lost when the engine cut out too early.
In
the first case the failure was caused by an embarrassing mismatch of imperial
and metric units between the spacecraft manufacturer Lockheed Martin and the project
manager, Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). In the latter case the deployment
of the landing legs was so violent it triggered premature engine shutdown forty
metres above the surface rather than at touchdown. In each case the problems were
entirely avoidable. It became clear that faster and cheaper did not necessarily
equate to better: it could just as easily mean a quicker route to egg on the face
of the world's most famous space agency.
Waiting
for a mission
The
politically savvy Goldin knew this as well as anybody and his first action after
this double whammy was to close down the next lander mission in the Mars pipeline,
the Mars Surveyor Lander of 2001. Its sister mission Mars Surveyor Orbiter 2001
was rapidly renamed Mars Odyssey and, since its arrival in Mars orbit in 2001,
has proved to be a spectacular success, mapping Mars and acting as the communications
relay for the most successful of all Mars landers, the Mars exploration rovers
(MERs) Spirit and Opportunity. But the Mars Surveyor Lander has spent the last
seven years in a clean room facility in Colorado - a $100 million craft just waiting
for a mission.
That
mission has finally arrived. Phoenix was selected from several competing tenders
in 2003, and is the first in a new series of 'scout' missions designed to augment
and explore in detail crucial aspects of Nasa's overarching Mars exploration program.
It is the first Mars mission to be overseen by a university rather than a Nasa
contractor and is the largest single grant awarded in the University of Arizona's
history.
Samples
of soil and water ice will be transferred to the lander's instruments by a robotic
arm which can extend 2.35 metres and which can dig a trench up to half a metre
deep. The aluminium and titanium arm is equipped with tines and a back-hoe to
cut through icy soil as well as a scoop camera to provide close-up, high resolution
images of the Martian surface. Researchers on Earth can search within the radius
of the arm for prospective samples as well as examine the rocky layers or stratigraphy
of the walls of the trench as it is dug.
Space-age
technology
This
spacecraft also has eyes. Positioned at about the height of human eyes, these
twin cameras - stereoscopic imagers similar to those that have proved so successful
on the MERs - provide three dimensional imaging out to the horizon. Another camera
was due to take photographs during the probe's descent to the martian surface,
although a wiring problem has recently nixed that plan.
Alongside
the latest technology, Phoenix also has features from a previous age of space
exploration, such as landing thrusters rather than air bags. And without wheels,
it is stuck wherever it lands.
From
the scientists' perspective one recognisable old-timer is the Meca instrument.
As Phoenix principal investigator Peter Smith of the University of Arizona points
out, this instrument was originally envisaged to support the human exploration
of the red planet by analysing Martian dust for toxicity and abrasive properties.
Such concerns are a direct result of the Apollo missions of the late 1960s and
early 1970s. As the Apollo astronauts climbed back aboard their lunar modules
they were liberally caked in black lunar dust and there was no way of removing
it in the confined space of the lander. Inevitably some of this dust was inhaled.
The
same problem will be unavoidable when the first human explorers land on Mars and
so Nasa wants to know the composition of the dust before they risk astronauts.
There are specific concerns about the possibility that Martian dust may contain
heavy metals or tiny particles that might cause the inflammatory lung disease
silicosis.
The
abrasion of space suit fabrics by these particles is also worrying. By the time
the Apollo program was drawing to its conclusion, one of the engineering findings
of the extended 'J' missions - those with up to three EVAs (extravehicular activity)
and use of lunar rovers - was that the astronauts' space suits, despite being
made of supertough Teflon-coated glass fibre beta cloth, were being abraded almost
to the point of unusability. Such a situation cannot be allowed for Mars exploration
where missions, by definition, will have to be long-term rather than the three
or four day affairs of the lunar landings.
The
Meca instrument is designed to address science as well as health and engineering
concerns and the Phoenix team will use it to investigate the geology, geochemistry,
palaeoclimatology and exobiology of the Martian north pole. The subtle change
in emphasis from manned exploration back to pure science is hinted at in the way
the instrument package's name has evolved. Where once Meca stood for 'Mars Environmental
Compatibility Assessment' it now stands for the more prosaic 'Microscopy, Electrochemistry
and Conductivity Analyser'.
Searching
for life
The
Meca instrument package consists of two parts. One is a miniaturised wet chemistry
laboratory - an 'electronic tongue' of four 35 millilitre cells that will receive
samples returned by the scoop and analyse their composition using conventional
wet chemistry in water brought from Earth. Each experiment takes up to 24 hours
and includes reagents to test for the presence of sulfates, oxidants and, crucially,
biogenic carbonates in the soil.
The
second half of the Meca device is an atomic force microscope. Complementing the
wet chemistry laboratory aboard the spacecraft, this instrument will use a combination
of coloured and UV LEDs to create a small-scale topographic map of soil and water-ice
grains retrieved by the robotic arm. Detection of any hydrous or clay minerals
in the soil will be strong evidence for the presence of liquid water at the Martian
poles. Particles from
1 millimetre down to 10 microns can be imaged, making
this the most powerful microscope ever sent to Mars.
Tega
is the other main analytical instrument. It is a combination of eight tiny ovens
(each about the size of a ballpoint pen) hooked up to a mass spectrometer that
will look for a variety of isotopes including carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and hydrogen.
The ability to look for carbon isotopes is central to the search for life - be
it extant or extinct - because photosynthesis splits carbon into its isotopes.
On Earth, the light carbon isotope 12C is preferentially incorporated into organic
material leaving the surrounding crystalline matrix enriched in the heavy carbon
isotope, 13C. If Tega detects material isotopically depleted in 12C (with high
levels of 13C) it will be strong evidence of the presence of life on Mars.
Of
course, the whole concept centres on the idea that life on Mars will be based
around the chemistry of carbon, a concept that has underpinned Nasa's life exploration
policy since the 1950s. Although the two legendary Viking landers of the 1970s
also carried mass spectrometers, they found no evidence for any organic material
on Mars. With the other three experiments producing highly equivocal results the
Viking landers - despite a price tag of over a billion dollars - added almost
nothing to the question of whether there was ever life on Mars.
Peter
Smith points to two flaws of the Viking missions - one in design and the other
in their mission profile. 'The Viking ovens did not get hot enough,' he observes,
'the kerogens [matter within sedimentary rocks] that are the most likely repositories
of organic material will not vapourise below 500oC, and that was the maximum rated
temperature of the Viking ovens.' By contrast the ovens that Phoenix carries will
reach 1000oC, easily hot enough to vapourise any hidebound hydrocarbons that the
Phoenix scoop feeds into the mass spectrometer's maw. The other problem Smith
identifies was simply that the Vikings 'landed in the wrong place.'
It's
a fair point: data from the orbiting Mars Global Surveyor and the European Space
Agency's (ESA's) Mars Express tell us that Mars almost certainly had water billions
of years ago, as well as in its more recent geological past. So the Phoenix mission
will look for water in the most likely places - the poles. No matter that Mars
is an arid, desert planet with a temperature profile that makes the Antarctic
look like Biarritz; there is the very strong suspicion that if water exists it
is at the poles, probably as water ice but possibly sublimating to vapour during
the Martian summer. But that simply was not known at the time the Viking landers
were sent to Mars, and so, as Smith says, they landed in the wrong place. Extending
that reasoning to the more modern era of Mars exploration suggests that even if
Beagle 2 had set down safely in Isidis Planitia her own mass spectrometer may
well have drawn a blank.
Cautious
new mission
And
so Phoenix is going to Mars with the latest kit to investigate life. But it is
not going to search for life - the real emphasis is subtly different. As Smith
points out, it is going to Mars to find out if life could exist, rather than if
it is there. This slight reluctance to grasp the biological nettle is probably
related to the many failures that have accompanied the search for life on Mars.
So many hopes and expectations have been pinned on finding life on Mars, from
the canals of Schiaparelli and Lowell to the Viking landers, the Mars Polar Lander
and the ill-fated voyage of Beagle 2, that anyone who goes to Mars now is very
coy. The best that can be expected these days is the mission profile that Phoenix
is following - to find out if life could exist on Mars.
Is
this too cautious? What if Phoenix's miniscule mass spectrometer does find depleted
carbon? Will that evidence be definitive, or only suggestive? Any discoveries
will probably be closer to the latter, which explains why more sophisticated life-hunting
missions are currently in the pipeline.
An
icy tomb
For
all the sophistication of Phoenix it will be no match for the prevailing environmental
conditions at the north pole of Mars. Eventually the solar panels that will unfurl
like Chinese fans will be unable to power the back-hoe that will yank chunks out
of the Martian permafrost. Then the craft's other instruments will take precedence
- most particularly the meteorological station that has been contributed by the
Canadian Space Agency to give us our first view of the weather at Mars' north
pole.
But
eventually this too will fail when the planet slides back into the iron grip of
the Martian winter. Soon after that, plucky Phoenix will find herself entombed
in six metres of ice, the first ice-maiden of Mars, beyond even the rescue of
the clever engineers of JPL. After that she will become dormant, like her Viking
and Pathfinder predecessors; her job done but waiting for the day when the astronauts
she blazed the trail for come to dig her from the sands of Mars.
Richard
Corfield is a science
writer based in Oxford, UK
Mars
Science Lab (MSL)
If
the Phoenix mission is a curious hybrid of old and new approaches to exploring
Mars, the mission planned for 2009 is the latest word. The six-wheeled MSL rover
is about ten times the size of the 1997 Sojourner Rover - the size of a small
car. Landing this kind of mass on the red planet cannot be accomplished using
either air bags or hydrazine thrusters. The number of air bags required to land
on Mars increases exponentially with mass and the MSL weighs almost 800 kg. Hydrazine
thrusters mounted on the lander - despite their successes in delivering Viking
and Pathfinder - are a risk because of the extreme reactivity of the fuel. Nasa
thinks that it can minimise that risk using the so-called 'Skycrane' approach
whereby, following parachute separation, the lander will actively manoeuvre close
to its landing site and then lower the rover from the hovering skycrane for a
soft landing on its wheels.
The
Mars Science Laboratory will be the most comprehensively equipped spacecraft ever
to rove across the red planet. It will carry three camera systems and two sets
of radiation detectors and a comprehensive suite of environmental sensors. It
will also carry four mass spectrometers including one, the Sample Analysis at
Mars Instrument Suite (Sam) that takes up more than half the science payload.
Like the Viking GCMS Sam is a both a mass spectrometer and a gas chromatograph
so that compounds can be separated before isotopic analysis. However, the most
important innovation of the Sam instrument is its on-board laser for vapourising
rock and soil samples whereupon the captured gas will be fed to the GC and the
mass spectrometer for analysis.