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The spacecraft, known as
"It was a hell of a lot scarier than the two Mars rovers," NASA's space sciences chief, Ed Weiler said, referring to the cushioned landings of the Spirit and
Pulled by Mars' gravity, Phoenix was tearing along at 12,700 mph (20,400 kph) before it entered the atmosphere, which slowed the craft so it could pop out a parachute and fire thruster rockets to gently float to the ground. Â
"It's down, baby, it's down!" yelled a NASA flight controller, looking at signals from Mars showing that
Flight controllers and scientists battled nerves as
"People got really uncomfortable," said Doug McCuistion, director of the Mars Exploration Program at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Scientists found in 2002 that Mars' polar regions have vast reservoirs of water frozen beneath a shallow layer of soil.
NASA attempted a landing on Mars' south pole in 1999, but a problem during the final minutes of descent ended the mission.
The
Instead, like the 1970s-era Viking probes and the failed Polar Lander mission, it used a jet pack to lower itself to the ground and fold-out legs to land on.
"We haven't landed successfully on legs and propulsive rockets in 32 years," Weiler said. "When we send humans there, women and men, they're going to be landing on rockets and legs, so it's important to show that we still know how to do this."
Photo: Reuters