The Government has offered Australia's three mobile operators, and vividwireless, renewal of their existing spectrum allocated on 15 year licences in the late 90s and early 2000s at set prices, while the Government expects to rake in $3 billion.
The Phoenix Mars Mission site explains this fifth stage in detail:
“Surface operations are planned in relation to martian days, which are known as sols. Because Mars rotates slightly slower than Earth, sol is 40 minutes longer than our planet's 24-hour day. A strategic plan is created that outlines operations two weeks into the future.”
“This strategic plan is used to create a more detailed tactical plan which decides surface activities that will take place for the next two sols. Daily science and engineering data is used to assess the status of the strategic and tactical plans, and the plans are updated as necessary.”
“Immediately after Phoenix touches down on the surface of Mars (sol 0), critical instruments such as the solar arrays and SSI mast are deployed. Later in the afternoon of sol 0, EDL data and MARDI images are sent to Earth. On sol 1, TEGA, MECA and RAC are turned on and checked out, and the RA is deployed. SSI begins taking images of the landing site and the area where the robotic arm will be digging, and MET begins to sample the weather at the landing site.”
See the Phoenix site for details on all the acronyms used above, all of which are suitably linked.
The site continues explaining that: “On sols 2 through 9, the instruments aboard Phoenix continue to take initial measurements. TEGA takes measurements of the martian atmosphere using its mass spectrometer.”
“The RA acquires a sample of martian soil and delivers it to TEGA on sol 4. This sample is analyzed by the differential scanning calorimeter in TEGA on the following sol. Another sample is delivered on sol 7 for analysis using MECA.”
“The digging operations phase is planned to take place on sols 10-90. SSI and RAC images will be analyzed to determine where the RA should dig. Phoenix will dig for up to 2.5 hours per sol during this period.”
“As the RA digs into the martian surface, SSI and RAC images will help determine when new samples should be delivered to the scientific instruments on Phoenix. Samples will be delivered to TEGA about every 15 cm (5.9 in) or when layering is obvious.”
“The four MECA cells will be reserved for samples from different layers that are expected to be encountered while digging. One cell will analyze a sample from the surface, another will analyze the dry regolith overburden, and one will be kept in reserve for the icy layer. One MECA cell will be kept for a repeat measurement or to examine another layer.”
For more information on the Phoenix Mars Mission, please visit the official website.
David Bass
| ComOps, a leading Australian provider of business software products and services, has won a competitive tender to deploy its Salvus safety, r…
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