http://news.myway.com/top/article/id/380923|top|01-23-2004::12:46|reuters.html

The first all-European mission to Mars has confirmed the presence of
frozen water on the planet, the project's leader said Friday, as
scientists seek to learn if life there ever existed.
"It shows that we may be able to find water in other areas on Mars ...
and that is very important for future missions to Mars," said project
leader Michael McKay.

McKay said confirmation of the presence of frozen water came in
high-resolution pictures of the planet's south pole beamed back from
Mars Express, the mother ship of the Beagle 2 probe that is feared to
have crashed on landing on Mars a month ago.

"We can confirm what NASA has already found at the south pole, but now
we have seen it during the summertime, when the carbon dioxide on the
surface is thinner, and have discovered water-ice," McKay told a news
conference at the European Space Agency's Space Operations Center in
Germany.

President Bush has announced plans to send humans back to the moon as
early as 2015 and eventually to Mars, where scientists say previous
NASA probes sent back photographs indicating frozen water at the
planet's poles.

The presence of ice on Earth's planetary neighbor would be promising
if, as some astronomers believe, Mars was warm and wet at some point.
Liquid water is a prerequisite for the development of Earth-type life.

VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY

The all-European mission had hoped to feed back data from the planet's
surface, but the fate of Beagle 2 appears to have dashed hope of that.

A U.S. mission has also hit problems, but after a period of garbled
communications the Mars rover Spirit resumed sending data to Earth
Friday, according to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the
Mars project for NASA.

The six-wheeled craft landed on the Red Planet on Jan. 3 for a planned
three-month mission.

Despite Beagle 2's apparent loss, the European mission still has
information from the orbiting Mars Express, and the project's leaders
showed its images "as seen through European eyes" Friday.

The European Space Agency's scientific director insisted the results
were just the start of the discovery process.

"There's going to be much more to come in the next two years. We're
just lifting the corner of the curtain," David Southwood told a news
conference.

"We do have new things to tell you. Many scientists would be
skeptical, but it's because we've got a great spacecraft and great new
instrumentation and therefore we're seeing new things."

The upbeat news conference contrasted with the gloom of the past month
over the failure to pick up signals from Beagle 2.

In the NASA mission, Spirit landed in the heart of Gusev Crater, a
basin thought to have once held a gigantic lake.

Previous NASA probes, Global Surveyor and Odyssey, have sent pictures
indicating frozen water at both the north and south poles of Mars,
scientists say.




xponent

Shaken Not Stirred Maru

rob


_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to