
A robust and wide ranging science agenda far beyond pictures could theoretically be implemented if Phoenix does amazingly survive and the pre-programmed Lazarus mode kicks in and she re-awakens with a functional arm. The goal would be to restart the assessment of habitability in the martian arctic where humanity first touched water beyond earth.
The two principal science instruments, TEGA and MECA, each have unexploited analysis cells which could be loaded with fresh martian soil samples and checked for signatures of water, organics and nutrients. Peter Smith, Phoenix Principal Investigator from the University of Arizona, confirmed to me that the single unopened TEGA oven could be used, if still intact. The one remaining MECA wet chemistry cell could also potentially be utilized.
Michael Hecht, lead scientist for MECA at JPL, told me that "in theory" fresh soil samples could be dropped as well onto the two microscope slides that were initially used for atmospheric air-fall samples rather than dirt droppings. High powered examinations with both the optical and atomic force microscopes might also resume. High resolution panoramic pictures would be taken by the stereo imaging system. Close up shots could be snapped by the robotic arm camera.

Phoenix landed on the northern plains of the martian artic on May 25, 2008 in a polar permafrost region that proved to be within arms reach of a vast, rock hard layer of frozen water ice. She completed 5 months of intense science, accomplishing break though discoveries at a high northern latitude. She then perished exactly as foreseen when the power output from the solar arrays plunged due to the onset of harsh seasonal weather causing dimming sunlight and bitterly frigid temperatures. At that point there were 17 hours of sunlight per sol (martian day) which are 24.7 hours in duration. Phoenix exceed her targeted lifetime by over 2 months.
And then the environmental situation turned even more dire. Temperatures plunged steeply to below minus 180 C, there was no sunlight at all for 3 months starting in April 2009 and sheets of carbon dioxide ice built up and may have encased the lander at least partially. As a result the electronic wiring likely passed through a "glass transition state" and became brittle and the twin solar arrays might have snapped off.
I asked Doug about NASA's go forward plan in the unlikely event that Phoenix arises, "It would probably take a few days at minimum to determine what Phoenix status was, and what may or may not be done with it. Viable plans cannot be generated until the condition of the lander is known, if we hear from it. So producing a plan [prior to contact] would be guesswork at best". As for how quickly any positive announcement would be made ? McCuiston told me that, "We will go through our regular public affairs process when the project tells us contact was made - that would be very quick, probably the same day".
Of course to accomplish anything meaningful requires money and people. So we next discussed the status of funding available from NASA and staffing from scientists. "The Mars Program held a small amount of contingency start-up funding. Additional funding would be determined based on the condition of the instruments, and the extent and value of the science that could be done", McCuiston explained. "The science team can be rallied quickly by the PI (Principal Investigator) since all are watching progress", he added.

How many scientists can be supported and for how long? "That all depends on the condition of the lander and the instruments", McCuiston said. Phoenix was an international space exploration mission led by the US and the University of Arizona with project management at JPL and in collaboration with partners from Canada, Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Finland and Great Britain.
NASA has two spacecraft currently circling Mars in near polar orbit which will be actively searching for Phoenix, named Mars Odyssey and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). "We actually listen for it, not try to contact it because of the operational mode it will come up in (if it does at all)", explained McCuiston. "Odyssey is slated to be the prime communications spacecraft".
The listening campaign with Odyssey begins on January 18 with 10+ overflights per day for three consecutive days, each of which has about a 10 minute window of opportunity, and will continue into February and March. "MRO will search on an as-available basis, depending on what else it's doing, since its primary role is MSL landing site work. Mars Express [from ESA] is not involved".
MRO does play another very important informational role. "They will try to image Phoenix about every 2 weeks", McCuiston said. No one I contacted was willing to hazard a guess yet as to whether the two power producing solar arrays are still intact. "So far the MRO images have been very poor due to fog and ice. It probably won't be very clear until February or later".
So the odds against contact are absolutely daunting. Still we can hope and dream that Phoenix may rise one last time from the ashes and phone home to resume her glorious achievements. If Phoenix is intact, she could potentially remain active as a research outpost for a much longer time period than the first round of 5 months since she is now at an earlier point in the martian year with sunlight increasing each sol. Phoenix final move was to poke the pitch fork like TECP probe into the martian dirt before shutting down.
Many Mars scientists believe that the arctic region may be the best place to look for evidence of current life on Mars. Indeed many Phoenix scientists have concluded that the Phoenix landing site is the "most habitable" of any thus far visited by human robotic explorers.



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