
Phoenix lander results point to Martian climate cycles
NASA/JPL NEWS RELEASE Posted: July 2, 2009

PASADENA, Calif. -- Favorable chemistry and episodes with thin films of liquid water during ongoing, long-term climate cycles may sometimes make the area where NASA's Phoenix Mars mission landed last year a favorable environment for microbes.

This mosaic of images from the Surface Stereo Imager camera shows several trenches dug by Phoenix, plus a corner of the spacecraft's deck. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Texas A&M University
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Interpretations of data that Phoenix returned during its five months
of operation on a Martian arctic plain fill four papers in this week's
edition of the journal Science, the first major peer-reviewed reports
on the mission's findings. Phoenix ended communications in November
2008 as the approach of Martian winter depleted energy from the
lander's solar panels.
"Not only did we find water ice, as expected, but the soil chemistry
and minerals we observed lead us to believe this site had a wetter and
warmer climate in the recent past -- the last few million years -- and
could again in the future," said Phoenix Principal Investigator Peter
Smith of the University of Arizona, Tucson.
A paper about Phoenix water studies, for which Smith is the lead
author with 36 coauthors from six nations, cites clues supporting an
interpretation that the soil has had films of liquid water in the
recent past. The evidence for water and potential nutrients "implies
that this region could have previously met the criteria for
habitability" during portions of continuing climate cycles, these
authors conclude.
The mission's biggest surprise was finding a multi-talented chemical
named perchlorate in the Martian soil. This Phoenix finding caps a
growing emphasis on the planet's chemistry, said Michael Hecht of
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., who has 10
coauthors on a paper about Phoenix's soluble-chemistry findings.
"The study of Mars is in transition from a follow-the-water stage to a
follow-the-chemistry stage," Hecht said. "With perchlorate, for
example, we see links to atmospheric humidity, soil moisture, a
possible energy source for microbes, even a possible resource for
humans."
Perchlorate, which strongly attracts water, makes up a few tenths of a
percent of the composition in all three soil samples analyzed by
Phoenix's wet chemistry laboratory. It could pull humidity from the
Martian air. At higher concentrations, it might combine with water as
a brine that stays liquid at Martian surface temperatures. Some
microbes on Earth use perchlorate as food. Human explorers might find
it useful as rocket fuel or for generating oxygen.
Another surprise from Phoenix was finding ice clouds and precipitation
more Earth-like than anticipated. The lander's Canadian laser
instrument for studying the atmosphere detected snow falling from
clouds. In one of this week's reports, Jim Whiteway of York
University, Toronto, and 22 coauthors say that, further into winter
than Phoenix operated, this precipitation would result in a seasonal
buildup of water ice on and in the ground.
"Before Phoenix we did not know whether precipitation occurs on Mars,"
Whiteway said. "We knew that the polar ice cap advances as far south
as the Phoenix site in winter, but we did not know how the water vapor
moved from the atmosphere to ice on the ground. Now we know that it
does snow, and that this is part of the hydrological cycle on Mars."
Evidence that water ice in the area sometimes thaws enough to moisten
the soil comes from finding calcium carbonate in soil heated in the
lander's analytic ovens or mixed with acid in the wet chemistry
laboratory. The University of Arizona's William Boynton and 13
coauthors report that the amount of calcium carbonate "is most
consistent with formation in the past by the interaction of
atmospheric carbon dioxide with liquid films of water on particle
surfaces."
The new reports leave unsettled whether soil samples scooped up by
Phoenix contained any carbon-based organic compounds. The perchlorate
could have broken down simple organic compounds during heating of soil
samples in the ovens, preventing clear detection.
The heating in ovens did not drive off any water vapor at temperatures
lower than 295 degrees Celsius (563 degrees Fahrenheit), indicating
the soil held no water adhering to soil particles. Climate cycles
resulting from changes in the tilt and orbit of Mars on scales of
hundreds of thousands of years or more could explain why effects of
moist soil are present.
The Phoenix mission was led by Smith at the University of Arizona with
project management at JPL and development partnership at Lockheed
Martin, Denver.
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