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Paris, France (ESA) May 29, 2008 With data recorded on board Mars Express, you can hear Phoenix descend on to the surface of the Red Planet. After being processed by the Mars Express Flight Control Team, the sounds of Phoenix descending are audible, loud and clear. The data from the Mars Express Lander Communication system (MELACOM) that tracked Phoenix was received on Earth soon after the Phoenix landing.
As Mars Express flew over The spike in the animation, between frequencies of 7 and 8 kiloHertz, shows the transmission from Phoenix itself. The lander can be seen in the animation starting from about 342 s after the start time and disappears at about 1085 s. This shows Mars Express picking up on the Phoenix signal and tracking it while closing in on the lander; the closest Mars Express got to Phoenix was 1550 km. As Mars Express flew away, the lander deployed its parachute, separated from it and landed, the signal from the lander was cut off. The shift of the spike seen in the animation, is due to the so-called Doppler effect, which is very similar to what we hear when listening to the whistle of a passing train. The signal was tracked successfully, even during the expected transmission blackout window of the descent, until the lander was out of Mars Express' view. The transmission blackout window is caused because of ionisation around the probe, which builds up as the lander descends through the atmosphere and only very weak signals come through. The rest of the recording, the start and the end, contains background noise generated by Mars Express itself.
Science observations Over the next few days, Mars Express will monitor Phoenix using MELACOM 15 more times; at least one of these will be used to demonstrate and confirm that the ESA spacecraft can be used as a data relay station for NASA, receiving data from the surface and transmitting test commands to the lander. Detailed information about the descent and landing will be available once the data from all the fly-overs is processed and analysed over the next few weeks. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Share This Article With Planet Earth
Related Links Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com Lunar Dreams and more
![]() ![]() NASA has cleared up a malfunction that for several hours caused a rupture in communications between Phoenix Mars Lander, the US space agency said Wednesday. |
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