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TOPIC: The Phoenix lander


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RE: The Phoenix lander
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NASA will hold a news briefing at 11:30 a.m. EDT on Monday, July 9, to preview the launch of the Phoenix Mars Lander. The spacecraft is being prepared for liftoff from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida in August. The briefing will originate from the NASA Headquarters auditorium, 300 E St., S.W., Washington. It will air live on NASA Television and be streamed online at:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

The Phoenix mission's long-armed robotic lander will touch down on Mars' northern polar region in May or June 2008. It will examine whether the icy soil there could have been a habitable environment for microbial life.

Briefing participants are:
-- Doug McCuistion, Mars Exploration Program director, NASA Headquarters, Washington
-- Bobby Fogel, Phoenix program scientist, NASA Headquarters
-- Peter Smith, Phoenix principal investigator, University of Arizona, Tucson
-- Barry Goldstein, Phoenix project manager, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California.


Source NASA

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STATUS REPORT: ELV-062707

Mission: Phoenix
Location: Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility
Launch Pad: 17-A
Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925
Launch Date: Aug. 3, 2007
Launch Time: 5:35:18 a.m. EDT

The solar array lighting test and installation of the spacecraft  parachute are complete.
Spacecraft fuelling is scheduled for July 2-3.
Spin balance testing is scheduled for July 11-12
At Pad 17-A, the attachment of the nine solid rocket boosters to the Delta II first stage is complete. Hoisting of the second stage atop the first stage is scheduled for June 28.

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Phoenix Mars Lander Press Opportunity at KSC Tuesday, June 26
NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander, to be launched on a Delta II rocket Aug. 3, will be the focus of a news media opportunity on Tuesday, June 26, at Kennedy Space Centre.
After a brief orientation, media representatives will be taken inside the clean room at KSC's Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility. Phoenix can be observed tucked inside the cruise stage that will carry it to the red planet. Project management and test team members from NASA, Lockheed Martin and the University of Arizona will be available for interviews.

The Phoenix spacecraft will land in the arctic region of Mars and attempt to answer questions such as: Can the Martian arctic support life? What is the history of water at the polar landing site? How is the Martian climate affected by polar seasonal change?

To answer these questions, Phoenix uses some of the most sophisticated and advanced technology ever sent to Mars. A robotic arm on the lander will dig through the soil to the water ice layer underneath, and deliver soil and ice samples to the mission's experiments. On the instrument deck are miniature ovens, a mass spectrometer, an atomic force microscope and a "chemistry lab-in-a box" to analyse the samples. Imaging systems will provide an unprecedented view of Mars. Also included is a weather station.

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STATUS REPORT: ELV-061807

Mission: Phoenix
Location: Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility
Launch Pad: 17-A
Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925
Launch Date: Aug. 3, 2007
Launch Time: 5:35:18 a.m. EDT

Installation of the parachute and associated mortar and ordnance is under way.
A deployment of the solar array on the cruise stage is planned for Wednesday and a solar array lighting test is scheduled for Friday.
The first stage of the Delta II was hoisted into the launcher today at Pad 17-A. Attachment of the nine solid rocket boosters to the first stage will be performed Tuesday through Thursday.
Hoisting of the Delta II second stage atop the first stage is scheduled for June 26.

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Gusting winds and the pulsating exhaust plumes from the Phoenix spacecraft's landing engines could complicate NASA's efforts to sample frozen soil from the Martian surface, according to a University of Michigan study.
Set to launch August 3 from Florida, the 414 million dollar Phoenix Mars Lander will use descent engines to touch down on the northern plains of the Red Planet, where vast stores of ice have been detected just below the surface.
A robotic arm will scoop frozen soil and dump it into science instruments that will analyse its chemical content to see if the soil has the potential to sustain microbial life.

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STATUS REPORT: ELV-061407

Mission: Phoenix
Location: Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility
Launch Pad: 17-A
Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925
Launch Date: Aug. 3, 2007
Launch Time: 5:35:18 a.m. EDT

The cruise system verification test is complete.
The planned testing of the landing radar is complete for now and will be resumed later.
Next week, technicians will install the parachute and associated mortar and ordnance. The solar array also will be deployed on the cruise stage for a planned test.
The first stage of the Delta II will be hoisted into the launcher at Pad 17-A on June 18.

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The NASA Phoenix Mars lander, carrying the most ambitious laboratory hardware ever sent to another planet, is ready for launch on a mission to taste Martian water and search for the organic carbon building-blocks of life near the planets north pole.
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STATUS REPORT: ELV-060607
Expendable Launch Vehicle Status Report

Mission: Phoenix
Location: Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility
Launch Pad: 17-A
Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925
Launch Date: Aug. 3, 2007
Launch Time: 5:35:18 a.m. EDT

Spacecraft processing is on schedule. The landing radar was integrated with the spacecraft on Tuesday, and testing is now under way.
An entry, descent and landing system verification test is scheduled for June 7 - 8.

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STATUS REPORT: ELV-051807

Mission: Phoenix
Location: Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility
Launch Pad: 17-A
Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925
Launch Date: Aug. 3, 2007
Launch Time: 5:35:18 a.m. EDT

* The dry spin test of the spacecraft was successfully completed. A heat shield deployment test also was successfully conducted Wednesday.
* The electrical power system final performance test was completed Thursday.
* The flight software will be loaded aboard the spacecraft on May 21.
* Compatibility testing with the Deep Space Network is scheduled for May 23-25.
* In Hangar AO at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, gimbal slew tests of the Delta II first-stage main engine will be conducted next week. These are main engine steering checks using the first-stage hydraulic systems.

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STATUS REPORT: ELV-051107
Expendable Launch Vehicle Status Report

Mission: Phoenix
Location: Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility
Launch Pad: 17-A
Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925
Launch Date: Aug. 3, 2007
Launch Time: 15:35:18 a.m. EDT

    * Spacecraft spin-balance testing is under way.
    * The spacecraft will be powered to begin testing on May 14.
    * The heat shield will be installed on May 15, and a separation test will then be performed.
    * The spacecraft's electrical power system will undergo a final performance test on May 17.
    * The flight software will be loaded aboard the spacecraft on May 21.


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