NASA’s Phoenix Spacecraft Lands at Martian Arctic Site

May 26, 2008

PASADENA, Calif. — NASA’s Phoenix spacecraft landed in the northern polar region of Mars today to begin three months of examining a site chosen for its likelihood of having frozen water within reach of the lander’s robotic arm.

art.phoenix.lander.nasa.jpg

Radio signals received at 4:53:44 p.m. Pacific Time (7:53:44 p.m. Eastern Time) confirmed the Phoenix Mars Lander had survived its difficult final descent and touchdown 15 minutes earlier. The signals took that long to travel from Mars to Earth at the speed of light.

Mission team members at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.; Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver; and the University of Arizona, Tucson, cheered confirmation of the landing and eagerly awaited further information from Phoenix later tonight.

Among those in the JPL control room was NASA Administrator Michael Griffin, who noted this was the first successful Mars landing without airbags since Viking 2 in 1976.

“For the first time in 32 years, and only the third time in history, a JPL team has carried out a soft landing on Mars,” Griffin said. “I couldn’t be happier to be here to witness this incredible achievement.”

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Team members celebrate Phoenix landing on Mars.
Larger view
During its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars after launching on Aug. 4, 2007, Phoenix relied on electricity from solar panels during the spacecraft’s cruise stage. The cruise stage was jettisoned seven minutes before the lander, encased in a protective shell, entered the Martian atmosphere. Batteries provide electricity until the lander’s own pair of solar arrays spread open.

“We’ve passed the hardest part and we’re breathing again, but we still need to see that Phoenix has opened its solar arrays and begun generating power,” said JPL’s Barry Goldstein, the Phoenix project manager. If all goes well, engineers will learn the status of the solar arrays between 7 and 7:30 p.m. Pacific Time (10 and 10:30 p.m. Eastern Time) from a Phoenix transmission relayed via NASA’s Mars Odyssey orbiter.

The team will also be watching for the Sunday night transmission to confirm that masts for the stereo camera and the weather station have swung to their vertical positions.

“What a thrilling landing! But the team is waiting impatiently for the next set of signals that will verify a healthy spacecraft,” said Peter Smith of the University of Arizona, principal investigator for the Phoenix mission. “I can hardly contain my enthusiasm. The first landed images of the Martian polar terrain will set the stage for our mission.”

art.mars.after.jpg

Another critical deployment will be the first use of the 7.7-foot-long robotic arm on Phoenix, which will not be attempted for at least two days. Researchers will use the arm during future weeks to get samples of soil and ice into laboratory instruments on the lander deck.

The signal confirming that Phoenix had survived touchdown was relayed via Mars Odyssey and received on Earth at the Goldstone, Calif., antenna station of NASA’s Deep Space Network.

Phoenix uses hardware from a spacecraft built for a 2001 launch that was canceled in response to the loss of a similar Mars spacecraft during a 1999 landing attempt. Researchers who proposed the Phoenix mission in 2002 saw the unused spacecraft as a resource for pursuing a new science opportunity. Earlier in 2002, Mars Odyssey discovered that plentiful water ice lies just beneath the surface throughout much of high-latitude Mars. NASA chose the Phoenix proposal over 24 other proposals to become the first endeavor in the Mars Scout program of competitively selected missions.

The Phoenix mission is led by Smith at the University of Arizona with project management at JPL and development partnership at Lockheed Martin, Denver. International contributions come from the Canadian Space Agency; the University of Neuchatel, Switzerland; the universities of Copenhagen and Aarhus, Denmark; Max Planck Institute, Germany; and the Finnish Meteorological Institute. For more about Phoenix, visit http://www.nasa.gov/phoenix .

 
 

Media contacts: Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
guy.webster@jpl.nasa.gov

Dwayne Brown 202-358-1726
NASA Headquarters, Washington
dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov

Sara Hammond 520-626-1974
University of Arizona, Tucson
shammond@lpl.arizona.edu

2008-81

Ref:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080525b.html
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/space/05/25/mars.lander/index.html


Baby with two faces worshipped as goddess

April 9, 2008
  • Baby born with two faces is worshipped as reincarnation of a Hindu goddess
  • Girl is healthy, drinks with two mouths and blinks her four eyes
  • 100 people a day visit girl at home to touch her feet out of respect
  • SAINI SUNPURA, India (AP) — A baby with two faces was born in a northern Indian village, where she is doing well and is being worshipped as the reincarnation of a Hindu goddess, her father said Tuesday.

    art.LALI.TWO.jpg

    Lali has a rare condition known as craniofacial duplication, where a single head has two faces.

    The baby, Lali, apparently has an extremely rare condition known as craniofacial duplication, where a single head has two faces. Except for her ears, all of Lali’s facial features are duplicated — she has two noses, two pairs of lips and two pairs of eyes.

    Lali’s condition is often linked to serious health complications, but the doctor said she was doing well.

    Singh said he took his daughter to a hospital in New Delhi where doctors suggested a CT scan to determine whether her internal organs were normal, but Singh said he felt it was unnecessary.

    ref:
    http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/04/08/baby.heads.ap/index.html


    CAPT. IRENE MORA: FIRST FILIPINO ASTRONAUT FACT or FAKE

    March 26, 2008
    By: sikatuna
    registered: 8/25/2003
    member
    Ilocos Sur, Philippines

    It’s about time to have a Filipino space explorer.
    There’s no limit in space. Who’s next?

    First Filipina astronaut now training in Russia

    By Alma Anonas-Carpio
    The Philippine Star 05/29/2004
    The first Filipina space cadet is now in Russia and she is preparing to rocket to the International Space Station orbiting Earth in July.

    Capt. Irene Mora, a commercial pilot by profession, arrived in Russia last week for the rigorous training she must undergo to be part of the crew that will spend a week on the International Space Station and journey to Mars.
    The very-humorous satire of Poet-pundit Fred Burce Bunao about the First Gentleman becoming the first Filipino cosmonaut immediately brought to mind the case of Irene Mora, whom I called a Filipino cosmoNUT or an astroNUT in 2004.

    Remember when Ms. Irene Mora became the toast of the Filipino cyber world in the first quarter of 2004? Many Manila-based newspapers printed her story as the first Filipino ever to fly in outer space. And Filipino-American newspapers published the reports from Manila as if they were the gospel truth. To my limited knowledge, I was the first journalist to write that she was a “Hoaxbalahap.” I said that she was lying and Filipinos worldwide were falling – hook, line and sinker – for her claim that, among others, she flew on a U.S. space shuttle in 2000.

    The reactions by many Filipino Internet users were swift. People, especially my long-time critics in the NaFFAA, the FANHS, the Books for the Barrios and their allies in the Fil-Am press, vilified my person and they said that I was anti-Filipino. Some of them even said that I was making fun of a legitimate achievement of a Filipino and a woman at that. Some e-forum participants started hitting me as the messenger of the bad news that the Mora claim was a hoax but they did not address the message at all.

    This writer was telling people that he was not a politician who likes only to say what people want to hear. A journalist should write the truth.

    To end the online dispute and silence my critics, I told the e-forums that I would engage the services of a third party, Joseph Lariosa, a veteran journalist, to find out the truth. Mr. Lariosa is the Chicago-based representative of the National Press Club of the Philippines. He is also the correspondent of the Manila Bulletin and Tempo newspapers of the Philippines. So, Mr. Lariosa did investigate the issue and came up with a report that confirmed my original statement that the Irene-Mora story was a hoax. Ms. Mora’s statement that she was the first Filipino astronaut or cosmonaut was false.

    To read Joseph Lariosa’s investigative report about the Irene Mora hoax, please go to your browser and type this link: http://www.pinoyonboard.com/2004/0620_mora.html

    We are also reprinting Mr. Lariosa’s report at the end of this article, as some of our readers may not be able to access it online.

    I said then that my exposé, as confirmed by Mr. Lariosa, should serve as a lesson to Filipino newspapers in Manila that they should investigate allegations first before they print them as news. And the Filipino-American publications that copied verbatim from Manila newspapers the Irene-Mora story should make sure that they are not copying a hoax. Filipino-American wannabe journalists should use their common sense in copying articles from Philippine publications.

    Indeed the Media Breakfast Club (MBC) was right in giving Mr. Lariosa the First MBC-Dean Reyes Award for Journalistic Excellence and Literary Distinction on Nov. 21, 2001. It was a validation of his stature as a real journalist.

    Aside from the newspapers in Chicago and San Diego and online publication in New York that carried my original story about the Irene-Mora hoax, all the Filipino-American publications reprinted the false news from Manila newspapers. After Mr. Lariosa verified my stand, only two Filipino-American media practitioners acknowledged my exposé. Here are their notes, as posted in the www.pinoyonboard.com:

    “Dear Bobby:

    “After the warning, there was another e-mail that did confirm the veracity of the story. The other newspaper based in New York ran the same headline that week. But again, with your and Joseph Lariosa’s (who is a reporter for our newspaper) investigation, we will run another Mora story; this time as a cosmoNUT. Thank you for the information you have given me. Everything is highly appreciated.

    “Warmest regards,
    Anthony Advincula
    Editor
    The Filipino Express
    2711 JFK Blvd. Jersey City
    NJ 07305
    201-434-1114″

    Larry Pelayo posted also in the www.pinoyonboard.com these notes: “Thanks a million. It is an honor to be a reader and receiver of reliable news and factual exposes from your end.

    “I know Joseph Lariosa by heart and I am a friend of Bobby Reyes.

    “Currently, I am the Chairman of the Board of the United Philippine National Press Club USA, Inc. and write on various Fil-am newspapers and magazines here in Los Angeles. I am also the current secretary of the Press Photographers Philippines USA.”

    A Ms. Ana posted also her comments in the www.pinoyonboard.com: “Your expose on this hoax, to my mind, has left the mainstream media in the Philippines not only-cross-eyed but almost half blind!!!”

    Dr. Eddie AAA Calderon of Minneapolis, Minnesota, posted his comments, to wit: “Just to let you know that I sent the article of Bobby Reyes to both the Philippine Inquirer and Philippine Star when he sent us the first e-mail about Ms. Mora’s claim that she was training to be an astronaut or she was an astronaut.

    “Have not received anything from the Philippine newspapers.

    “Also the previous article of Ms. Mora stated that she was a polyglot or multilingual and speaking at least 8 or 9 languages. If her contention that she was training to be an astronaut is false then her multilingual claim can also be a suspect.”

    The Filipino newspapers in the Philippines and in the United States, with the exceptions of the Filipino Express and the ang Panahon, never bothered to issue any retraction after they published the false claims of Ms. Mora.

    Here is Joseph G. Lariosa’s investigative report, as originally published in the www.pinoyonboard.com on June 21, 2004: QUOTE.

    After an Investigation: Filipina’s Claims to Be a Cosmonaut Do Not Check Out

    Chicago, ILLINOIS — When your mother says, “I love you,” check it out. This rule of thumb that guides hard-nosed journalists to double check their sources for stories that are too good to be true appears have slipped by some Philippine newspapers, which are the chief source of most of their stories of Overseas-Filipino newspapers.

    Bobby M. Reyes, an online community journalist from Los Angeles, California, pointed the breach of this journalists’ cardinal rule when he alerted this reporter, who is also working with an upstart Chicago-based news agency, Journal List Press Exchange (JLPX), on June 5, 2004, to check the veracity of reports from some leading newspapers from Manila that a Filipina is in line to become the next astronaut or cosmonaut.

    According to the Philippine Star article written by Joanne Rae Ramirez, which came out on February 28, 2004, it said: “Irene Mora, the first Filipino likely to conquer outer space, has been to “the edge of the earth” and loves it there. This year, she aims to go beyond it.

    Irene, 31, flew on a space shuttle to the “edge of the earth” in 2000 as part of a research mission sponsored by the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and in the darkness beheld “a sparkling diamond.”

    On Dec. 14, 2003, the Philippine Daily Inquirer came out with an article written by Volt Contreras, which alleged that: “Mora is now studying Russian as she will be heading for the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City next year under a training program offered by Space Adventures of Arlington, Virginia.

    “Space Adventures is the company that launched in 2000 the world’s first “space tourist,” Dennis Tito, an American.”

    A check by JLPX with the NASA’s public affairs office yielded an email response on June 14 from Bobbie Ferguson, who said that “I do not have any information that Irene Mora was or is a NASA astronaut. She has not flown on the Space Shuttle in 2000.”

    An email message sent on June 6 to the Russian Cultural Centre and the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C., on how to get in touch with the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City resulted with a phone call from Russian Cultural Centre Director Natalie Batova, directing JLPX to get in touch with Space Adventures in Arlington, Virginia.

    A check with the Space Adventures directed JLPX to Stacey Tearne, vice president of Crosby-Volmer International Communications, which handles the publicity of Space Adventures. Ms. Tearne wrote an email response on June 13 that said: “I do not know of a Capt. Irene Mora nor is she a Space Adventures’ orbital client.”

    A news story published by the Manila Times on April 14, 2003, under the headline, “Filipina is world’s best skydiver,” said! Lt. Commander Irene Mora, a lady pilot from the Philippine Coast Guard Auxiliary Air Operation Wing, made the Philippines proud by winning the gold in the Friendship Airborne 2003 Skydiving Championships in Bangkok, Thailand.

    In winning the skydiving crown, Mora became the first-ever Filipina to win the prestigious crown in this death-defying event which drew participants from the best skydivers in the United States, Europe and Asia.
    This story, however, appeared to have been confirmed by Dr. Frank Osanka, president of Friendship Airborne organization based at Racine, Wisconsin. Mr. Osanka wrote an email response as follows: “Thank you for your thoughtfulness in forwarding the piece on Ms. Irene Moro (sic). She is outstanding. Friendship Airborne hopes to be invited to jump again in the Philippines as we were in l998. Best wishes, Doc.

    The JLPX initially contacted on June 5 retired Admiral Reuben Lista of the Philippine Coast Guard, who was vacationing in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the time on a tip by Mr. Lista’s tour guide and friend, Mr. Fernando “Ronnie” M. Estrada of San Jose, California. Mr. Lista directed JLPX to contact Admiral Joselito Aseniero of the Philippine Coast Guard Auxiliary. An email reply from Capt. Harold Wolf of PCGA on June 7 said, “Your message has been forwarded to Adm. Aseniero.” As of press time, Admiral Aseniero has not yet responded to verify the veracity of news reports about Ms. Mora’s “astronaut or cosmonaut” aspirations.

    Last Thursday, June 17, a Ms. Mora called up JLPX, saying she was informed by Dr. Osanka that a media representative wanted to talk to her. The voice from the other line identified herself as Ms. Mora. As the voice was breaking, she said she was in Beijing and that she said “I could hardly hear you.” She gave away her email address so she could understand what the media outlet wanted from her.

    An email was sent to Ms. Mora on June 18, seeking comments that both US NASA and Space Adventures are dismissing press reports that she flew on NASA’s Space Shuttle in 2000 and that the Space Adventures said she is not an orbital client. As of press time, Ms. Mora has not responded to the email inquiry.

    In its June 3-9 issue, the weekly Ang Panahon (Time) based in Daly City, California, published and edited by Greg Macabenta, ran a banner headline: “Doubts cast on First Filipina Cosmonaut.” The paper also contacted Space Adventures and quoted Emeline Paat, a Filipina working with the company, informing Ang Panahon that Mora never actually trained with them or even visited.

    Ang Panahon said Mora had called up the company (Space Adventures) several times, from early this year, to inquire about the company’s space tourism program.

    Bobby Reyes said that if Ms. Mora could not prove that she flew NASA’s Space Shuttle in 2000 so she cannot be an astronaut nor is she heading to Russia so she can be a cosmonaut, she might as well call herself either “astronut” or “cosmonut.”

    Meanwhile, the numerous stories posted on the Internet about Ms. Mora’s going to outer space are likely to be entered into the “hoax of fame” or become a famous bum steer (koryente), according to a JLPX staff.

    As to reports that Ms. Mora renounced her US citizenship to become a Filipino, it is still a subject of investigation. # # # UNQUOTE.

    http://www.mabuhayradio.com/content/view/669/51/
    Update: 11/29/08


    Hello world!

    June 29, 2007

    Welcome to MY WORLD! \m/_