There
is water ice on Mars within reach of the Mars Phoenix Lander, NASA scientists announced Thursday. Photographic evidence settles the debate over the nature of the white material seen in photographs sent back by the craft. As seen in lower left of this image, chunks of the ice sublimed (changed
directly from solid to gas) over the course of four days, after the lander's
digging exposed them.
"It must be ice," said the Phoenix Lander's lead
investigator, Peter Smith. "These little clumps completely disappearing over the
course of a few days, that is perfect evidence that it's ice."
The confirmation that water ice exists in the area directly surrounding the
lander is big and good news for the Martian mission. NASA's stated goal for the
Mars Phoenix was to find exactly this -- water ice -- and then analyze it. With
the latest news, the first step is accomplished. All that's left now is to get
the water into the Phoenix's instruments, a task which has occasionally proven
more difficult than anticipated.