nexus6

nexus6

Phoenix Mars Lander Landing on the Red Plane



"Event Time (UTC) Time (PST)
Cruise Stage Separation 23:39:17 16:39:17
Turn-to-Entry 23:39:47 16:39:47
Entry 23:46:17 16:46:17
Nominal Plasma Black out start 23:47:05 16:47:05
Nominal Plasma Black out end 23:49:05 16:49:05
Nominal Heatshield Deployment 23:50:12 16:50:12
Nominal Lander Leg Deployment 23:50:22 16:50:22
Nominal Lander Separation 23:52:50 16:52:50
Nominal Touch Down 23:53:33 16:53:33"
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/blogs/20080525.html
Phoenix was on track for anticipated entry into the atmosphere at 4:30p.m. Pacific Time and reaching the surface at 4:38 p.m., although confirmation of those events comes no sooner than 15 minutes, 20 seconds later, due to the time needed for radio signals to travel from Mars to Earth.




1.28 million miles left to travel out of its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars.
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/


May 25, Landing on Mars at approximately 7:53 p.m. (4:53 p.m. Pacific)
日本時間5/26 8:53am
Landing Press Kit (3Mb)
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/226508main_phoenix-landing1.pdf

Flight System

Phoenix Lander

Landing on Mars

NASA - Phoenix Landing Events Schedule
May 21-26, 2008
Trajectory correction maneuver opportunity (TCM6X), 8:46 a.m.
News briefing, noon
Begin non-commentary live television feed from JPL control room, 3 p.m.
Begin commentated live television feed from JPL control room, 3:30 p.m.
Propulsion system pressurization, 4:16 p.m.
Begin "bent-pipe" relay relay (continuous transmission of Phoenix data as it is received) through NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft to Goldstone, Calif., Deep Space Network station, 4:38 p.m.
Green Bank, W. Va., radio telescope listening for direct UHF from Phoenix, 4:38 p.m.
Cruise stage separates, 4:39 p.m.
Spacecraft turns to attitude for atmospheric entry, 4:40 p.m.
Spacecraft enters atmosphere, 4:46:33 p.m.
Likely blackout period as hot plasma surrounds spacecraft, 4:47 through 4:49 p.m.
Parachute deploys, 4:50:15 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Heat shield jettisoned, 4:50:30 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Legs deploy, 4:50:40 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds. -
Radar activated, 4:51:30 p.m.
Lander separates from backshell, 4:53:09 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Transmission gap during switch to helix antenna 4:53:08 to 4:53:14 p.m.
Descent thrusters throttle up, 4:53:12 p.m.
Constant-velocity phase starts, 4:53:34 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Touchdown, 4:53:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Lander radio off 4:54:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Begin opening solar arrays (during radio silence) 5:13 p.m.
Begin NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:28 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Begin Europe's Mars Express spacecraft playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:30 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Post-landing poll of subsystem teams about spacecraft status, 5:30 p.m.
Mars Odyssey "bent-pipe" relay of transmission from Phoenix, with engineering data and possibly including first images, 6:43 to 7:02 p.m. Data could take up to about 30 additional minutes in pipeline before being accessible. If all goes well, live television feed from control room may show first images as they are received. The first images to be taken after landing will be of solar arrays, to check deployment status.
News briefing, 9 p.m.

Mars Phoenix Lander
May 25, Sunday
3 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - JPL
6 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL (Media Channel)
6:30 - 8:45 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL
9:30 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - First Downlink of Data - JPL
May 26, Monday
6 - 10 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Live Satellite Interviews - JPL (Media Channel)
12 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Post Landing Briefing - JPL
2 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Update Briefing - JPL




Phoenix Lands on Mars: May 25
NASA TV coverage begins 3:30 p.m.





Credit NASA
Phoenix Mission - Science News Briefing
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
NASA's Phoenix lander is getting ready to touch down on Mars and begin an unprecedented investigation of the Red Planet's arctic realm.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/13may_phoenix.htm?list1073247
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
Phoenix Mars Mission - Where is Phoenix
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/where_phoenix.php



NASA Spacecraft Fine Tunes Course for Mars Landing
"PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA engineers have adjusted the flight path of the Phoenix Mars Lander, setting the spacecraft on course for its May 25 landing on the Red Planet."
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080410.html


Phoenix: Entry, Descent and Landing

"NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander is set to explore the Martian arctic, looking for signs of water and conditions favorable to life. But getting there won't be easy: in the international history of the space age, only five of 13 attempts to land on Mars have succeeded.
Phoenix will enter the Martian atmosphere at nearly 13,000 miles per hour, kicking off a seven-minute series of events that must slow the lander to five miles an hour before it's three legs reach the ground. It's the first attempt at a powered landing on Mars since the Viking missions of 1976."
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/phoenix_edl_gallery/



Back to Mars: After '99 failure, NASA sets sights on lander touchdown Sunday
"The system improvements on the lander stem from the results of a NASA review board, which investigated the failure of the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) mission"
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9088438&intsrc=hm_ts_head




Mars Today:The Whole Mars Catalog at Mars Today .com
http://www.marstoday.com/
Mars TV
http://www.mars.tv/




Foot-dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-like Hot Spring Deposits
"The silica discovery, announced briefly by NASA in 2007, is fully described in a multi-author paper that appears in the May 23, 2008 issue of the scientific journal Science. "
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522145222.htm

Science 23 May 2008:
Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars -- Squyres et al. 320 (5879): 1063 -- Science
"Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars
Mineral deposits on the martian surface can elucidate ancient environmental conditions on the planet. Opaline silica deposits (as much as 91 weight percent SiO2) have been found in association with volcanic materials by the Mars rover Spirit. The deposits are present both as light-toned soils and as bedrock. We interpret these materials to have formed under hydrothermal conditions and therefore to be strong indicators of a former aqueous environment. This discovery is important for understanding the past habitability of Mars because hydrothermal environments on Earth support thriving microbial ecosystems."
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/320/5879/1063

Hot Springs and Life? on Mars - TierneyLab - Science - New York Times Blog
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/22/hot-springs-and-life-on-mars/?hp




Adware.RougeSuspect
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\CLSID\{C7310572-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F}\InprocServer32
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSSearch\Bin\SRCHADM.DLL
Microsoft Search ObjCreator Class
ObjCreator.ObjCreator.1
参考例

Best Antivirus/Internet Securities for vista? [Archive] - The DVD Forums
"AdWare.RougeSuspect etc. This was a PC only connected to the internet to update AVG and Vista. Funny thing is though other spyware programmes dont report anything. When I send them to quarantine they are not files.
AVG is good but it see's innocent files as spyware."
http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:eYFgmeHf1IcJ:www.thedvdforums.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-477224.html+Adware.RougeSuspect&hl=ja&ct=clnk&cd=8

Yahoo! Answers - Adware.Rougesuspect ?
"Well i removed it but my computer is generally being much slower and im having sign in problems with hotmail and msn messenger.."
http://malaysia.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080507164715AAK1FzT



Mars Exploration: Missions
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/log/
火星への挑戦の記録 失敗多しッ
Launch Date Name Country Result Reason
1960 Korabl 4 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1960 Korabl 5 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1962 Korabl 11 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1962 Mars 1 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio Failed
1962 Korabl 13 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1964 Mariner 3 US (flyby) Failure Shroud failed to jettison
1964 Mariner 4 US (flyby) Success Returned 21 images
1964 Zond 2 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio failed
1969 Mars 1969A USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mars 1969B USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mariner 6 US (flyby) Success Returned 75 images
1969 Mariner 7 US (flyby) Success Returned 126 images
1971 Mariner 8 US Failure Launch failure
1971 Kosmos 419 USSR Failure Achieved Earth orbit only
1971 Mars 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure "Orbiter arrived, but no useful data and Lander destroyed"
1971 Mars 3 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success "Orbiter obtained approximately 8 months of data and lander landed safely, but only 20 seconds of data"
1971 Mariner 9 US Success "Returned 7,329 images"
1973 Mars 4 USSR Failure Flew past Mars
1973 Mars 5 USSR Success Returned 60 images; only lasted 9 days
1973 Mars 6 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success/Failure Occultation experiment produced data and Lander failure on descent
1973 Mars 7 Lander USSR Failure Missed planet; now in solar orbit.
1975 Viking 1 Orbiter/Lander US Success Located landing site for Lander and first successful landing on Mars
1975 Viking 2 Orbiter/Lander US Success "Returned 16,000 images and extensive atmospheric data and soil experiments"
1988 Phobos 1 Orbiter USSR Failure Lost en route to Mars
1988 Phobos 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure Lost near Phobos
1992 Mars Observer US Failure Lost prior to Mars arrival
1996 Mars Global Surveyor US Success More images than all Mars Missions
1996 Mars 96 USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1996 Mars Pathfinder US Success Technology experiment lasting 5 times longer than warranty
1998 Nozomi Japan Failure No orbit insertion; fuel problems
1998 Mars Climate Orbiter US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Mars Polar Lander US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Deep Space 2 Probes (2) US Failure Lost on arrival (carried on Mars Polar Lander)
2001 Mars Odyssey US Success High resolution images of Mars
2003 Mars Express Orbiter/Beagle 2 Lander ESA Success/Failure Orbiter imaging Mars in detail and lander lost on arrival
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Spirit US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Opportunity US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter US Success Returned more than 26 terabits of data (more than all other Mars missions combined)
2007 Phoenix Mars Lander US TBD





Credit: NASA, NASA TV




"Event Time (UTC) Time (PST)
Cruise Stage Separation 23:39:17 16:39:17
Turn-to-Entry 23:39:47 16:39:47
Entry 23:46:17 16:46:17
Nominal Plasma Black out start 23:47:05 16:47:05
Nominal Plasma Black out end 23:49:05 16:49:05
Nominal Heatshield Deployment 23:50:12 16:50:12
Nominal Lander Leg Deployment 23:50:22 16:50:22
Nominal Lander Separation 23:52:50 16:52:50
Nominal Touch Down 23:53:33 16:53:33"
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/blogs/20080525.html
Phoenix was on track for anticipated entry into the atmosphere at 4:30p.m. Pacific Time and reaching the surface at 4:38 p.m., although confirmation of those events comes no sooner than 15 minutes, 20 seconds later, due to the time needed for radio signals to travel from Mars to Earth.




1.28 million miles left to travel out of its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars.
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/


May 25, Landing on Mars at approximately 7:53 p.m. (4:53 p.m. Pacific)
日本時間5/26 8:53am
Landing Press Kit (3Mb)
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/226508main_phoenix-landing1.pdf

Flight System

Phoenix Lander

Landing on Mars

NASA - Phoenix Landing Events Schedule
May 21-26, 2008
Trajectory correction maneuver opportunity (TCM6X), 8:46 a.m.
News briefing, noon
Begin non-commentary live television feed from JPL control room, 3 p.m.
Begin commentated live television feed from JPL control room, 3:30 p.m.
Propulsion system pressurization, 4:16 p.m.
Begin "bent-pipe" relay relay (continuous transmission of Phoenix data as it is received) through NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft to Goldstone, Calif., Deep Space Network station, 4:38 p.m.
Green Bank, W. Va., radio telescope listening for direct UHF from Phoenix, 4:38 p.m.
Cruise stage separates, 4:39 p.m.
Spacecraft turns to attitude for atmospheric entry, 4:40 p.m.
Spacecraft enters atmosphere, 4:46:33 p.m.
Likely blackout period as hot plasma surrounds spacecraft, 4:47 through 4:49 p.m.
Parachute deploys, 4:50:15 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Heat shield jettisoned, 4:50:30 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Legs deploy, 4:50:40 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds. -
Radar activated, 4:51:30 p.m.
Lander separates from backshell, 4:53:09 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Transmission gap during switch to helix antenna 4:53:08 to 4:53:14 p.m.
Descent thrusters throttle up, 4:53:12 p.m.
Constant-velocity phase starts, 4:53:34 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Touchdown, 4:53:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Lander radio off 4:54:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Begin opening solar arrays (during radio silence) 5:13 p.m.
Begin NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:28 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Begin Europe's Mars Express spacecraft playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:30 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Post-landing poll of subsystem teams about spacecraft status, 5:30 p.m.
Mars Odyssey "bent-pipe" relay of transmission from Phoenix, with engineering data and possibly including first images, 6:43 to 7:02 p.m. Data could take up to about 30 additional minutes in pipeline before being accessible. If all goes well, live television feed from control room may show first images as they are received. The first images to be taken after landing will be of solar arrays, to check deployment status.
News briefing, 9 p.m.

Mars Phoenix Lander
May 25, Sunday
3 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - JPL
6 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL (Media Channel)
6:30 - 8:45 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL
9:30 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - First Downlink of Data - JPL
May 26, Monday
6 - 10 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Live Satellite Interviews - JPL (Media Channel)
12 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Post Landing Briefing - JPL
2 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Update Briefing - JPL




Phoenix Lands on Mars: May 25
NASA TV coverage begins 3:30 p.m.





Credit NASA
Phoenix Mission - Science News Briefing
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
NASA's Phoenix lander is getting ready to touch down on Mars and begin an unprecedented investigation of the Red Planet's arctic realm.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/13may_phoenix.htm?list1073247
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
Phoenix Mars Mission - Where is Phoenix
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/where_phoenix.php



NASA Spacecraft Fine Tunes Course for Mars Landing
"PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA engineers have adjusted the flight path of the Phoenix Mars Lander, setting the spacecraft on course for its May 25 landing on the Red Planet."
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080410.html


Phoenix: Entry, Descent and Landing

"NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander is set to explore the Martian arctic, looking for signs of water and conditions favorable to life. But getting there won't be easy: in the international history of the space age, only five of 13 attempts to land on Mars have succeeded.
Phoenix will enter the Martian atmosphere at nearly 13,000 miles per hour, kicking off a seven-minute series of events that must slow the lander to five miles an hour before it's three legs reach the ground. It's the first attempt at a powered landing on Mars since the Viking missions of 1976."
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/phoenix_edl_gallery/



Back to Mars: After '99 failure, NASA sets sights on lander touchdown Sunday
"The system improvements on the lander stem from the results of a NASA review board, which investigated the failure of the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) mission"
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9088438&intsrc=hm_ts_head




Mars Today:The Whole Mars Catalog at Mars Today .com
http://www.marstoday.com/
Mars TV
http://www.mars.tv/




Foot-dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-like Hot Spring Deposits
"The silica discovery, announced briefly by NASA in 2007, is fully described in a multi-author paper that appears in the May 23, 2008 issue of the scientific journal Science. "
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522145222.htm

Science 23 May 2008:
Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars -- Squyres et al. 320 (5879): 1063 -- Science
"Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars
Mineral deposits on the martian surface can elucidate ancient environmental conditions on the planet. Opaline silica deposits (as much as 91 weight percent SiO2) have been found in association with volcanic materials by the Mars rover Spirit. The deposits are present both as light-toned soils and as bedrock. We interpret these materials to have formed under hydrothermal conditions and therefore to be strong indicators of a former aqueous environment. This discovery is important for understanding the past habitability of Mars because hydrothermal environments on Earth support thriving microbial ecosystems."
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/320/5879/1063

Hot Springs and Life? on Mars - TierneyLab - Science - New York Times Blog
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/22/hot-springs-and-life-on-mars/?hp




Adware.RougeSuspect
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\CLSID\{C7310572-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F}\InprocServer32
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSSearch\Bin\SRCHADM.DLL
Microsoft Search ObjCreator Class
ObjCreator.ObjCreator.1
参考例

Best Antivirus/Internet Securities for vista? [Archive] - The DVD Forums
"AdWare.RougeSuspect etc. This was a PC only connected to the internet to update AVG and Vista. Funny thing is though other spyware programmes dont report anything. When I send them to quarantine they are not files.
AVG is good but it see's innocent files as spyware."
http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:eYFgmeHf1IcJ:www.thedvdforums.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-477224.html+Adware.RougeSuspect&hl=ja&ct=clnk&cd=8

Yahoo! Answers - Adware.Rougesuspect ?
"Well i removed it but my computer is generally being much slower and im having sign in problems with hotmail and msn messenger.."
http://malaysia.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080507164715AAK1FzT



Mars Exploration: Missions
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/log/
火星への挑戦の記録 失敗多しッ
Launch Date Name Country Result Reason
1960 Korabl 4 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1960 Korabl 5 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1962 Korabl 11 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1962 Mars 1 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio Failed
1962 Korabl 13 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1964 Mariner 3 US (flyby) Failure Shroud failed to jettison
1964 Mariner 4 US (flyby) Success Returned 21 images
1964 Zond 2 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio failed
1969 Mars 1969A USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mars 1969B USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mariner 6 US (flyby) Success Returned 75 images
1969 Mariner 7 US (flyby) Success Returned 126 images
1971 Mariner 8 US Failure Launch failure
1971 Kosmos 419 USSR Failure Achieved Earth orbit only
1971 Mars 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure "Orbiter arrived, but no useful data and Lander destroyed"
1971 Mars 3 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success "Orbiter obtained approximately 8 months of data and lander landed safely, but only 20 seconds of data"
1971 Mariner 9 US Success "Returned 7,329 images"
1973 Mars 4 USSR Failure Flew past Mars
1973 Mars 5 USSR Success Returned 60 images; only lasted 9 days
1973 Mars 6 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success/Failure Occultation experiment produced data and Lander failure on descent
1973 Mars 7 Lander USSR Failure Missed planet; now in solar orbit.
1975 Viking 1 Orbiter/Lander US Success Located landing site for Lander and first successful landing on Mars
1975 Viking 2 Orbiter/Lander US Success "Returned 16,000 images and extensive atmospheric data and soil experiments"
1988 Phobos 1 Orbiter USSR Failure Lost en route to Mars
1988 Phobos 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure Lost near Phobos
1992 Mars Observer US Failure Lost prior to Mars arrival
1996 Mars Global Surveyor US Success More images than all Mars Missions
1996 Mars 96 USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1996 Mars Pathfinder US Success Technology experiment lasting 5 times longer than warranty
1998 Nozomi Japan Failure No orbit insertion; fuel problems
1998 Mars Climate Orbiter US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Mars Polar Lander US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Deep Space 2 Probes (2) US Failure Lost on arrival (carried on Mars Polar Lander)
2001 Mars Odyssey US Success High resolution images of Mars
2003 Mars Express Orbiter/Beagle 2 Lander ESA Success/Failure Orbiter imaging Mars in detail and lander lost on arrival
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Spirit US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Opportunity US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter US Success Returned more than 26 terabits of data (more than all other Mars missions combined)
2007 Phoenix Mars Lander US TBD





Credit: NASA, NASA TV




"Event Time (UTC) Time (PST)
Cruise Stage Separation 23:39:17 16:39:17
Turn-to-Entry 23:39:47 16:39:47
Entry 23:46:17 16:46:17
Nominal Plasma Black out start 23:47:05 16:47:05
Nominal Plasma Black out end 23:49:05 16:49:05
Nominal Heatshield Deployment 23:50:12 16:50:12
Nominal Lander Leg Deployment 23:50:22 16:50:22
Nominal Lander Separation 23:52:50 16:52:50
Nominal Touch Down 23:53:33 16:53:33"
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/blogs/20080525.html
Phoenix was on track for anticipated entry into the atmosphere at 4:30p.m. Pacific Time and reaching the surface at 4:38 p.m., although confirmation of those events comes no sooner than 15 minutes, 20 seconds later, due to the time needed for radio signals to travel from Mars to Earth.




1.28 million miles left to travel out of its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars.
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/


May 25, Landing on Mars at approximately 7:53 p.m. (4:53 p.m. Pacific)
日本時間5/26 8:53am
Landing Press Kit (3Mb)
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/226508main_phoenix-landing1.pdf

Flight System

Phoenix Lander

Landing on Mars

NASA - Phoenix Landing Events Schedule
May 21-26, 2008
Trajectory correction maneuver opportunity (TCM6X), 8:46 a.m.
News briefing, noon
Begin non-commentary live television feed from JPL control room, 3 p.m.
Begin commentated live television feed from JPL control room, 3:30 p.m.
Propulsion system pressurization, 4:16 p.m.
Begin "bent-pipe" relay relay (continuous transmission of Phoenix data as it is received) through NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft to Goldstone, Calif., Deep Space Network station, 4:38 p.m.
Green Bank, W. Va., radio telescope listening for direct UHF from Phoenix, 4:38 p.m.
Cruise stage separates, 4:39 p.m.
Spacecraft turns to attitude for atmospheric entry, 4:40 p.m.
Spacecraft enters atmosphere, 4:46:33 p.m.
Likely blackout period as hot plasma surrounds spacecraft, 4:47 through 4:49 p.m.
Parachute deploys, 4:50:15 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Heat shield jettisoned, 4:50:30 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Legs deploy, 4:50:40 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds. -
Radar activated, 4:51:30 p.m.
Lander separates from backshell, 4:53:09 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Transmission gap during switch to helix antenna 4:53:08 to 4:53:14 p.m.
Descent thrusters throttle up, 4:53:12 p.m.
Constant-velocity phase starts, 4:53:34 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Touchdown, 4:53:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Lander radio off 4:54:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Begin opening solar arrays (during radio silence) 5:13 p.m.
Begin NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:28 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Begin Europe's Mars Express spacecraft playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:30 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Post-landing poll of subsystem teams about spacecraft status, 5:30 p.m.
Mars Odyssey "bent-pipe" relay of transmission from Phoenix, with engineering data and possibly including first images, 6:43 to 7:02 p.m. Data could take up to about 30 additional minutes in pipeline before being accessible. If all goes well, live television feed from control room may show first images as they are received. The first images to be taken after landing will be of solar arrays, to check deployment status.
News briefing, 9 p.m.

Mars Phoenix Lander
May 25, Sunday
3 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - JPL
6 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL (Media Channel)
6:30 - 8:45 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL
9:30 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - First Downlink of Data - JPL
May 26, Monday
6 - 10 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Live Satellite Interviews - JPL (Media Channel)
12 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Post Landing Briefing - JPL
2 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Update Briefing - JPL




Phoenix Lands on Mars: May 25
NASA TV coverage begins 3:30 p.m.





Credit NASA
Phoenix Mission - Science News Briefing
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
NASA's Phoenix lander is getting ready to touch down on Mars and begin an unprecedented investigation of the Red Planet's arctic realm.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/13may_phoenix.htm?list1073247
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
Phoenix Mars Mission - Where is Phoenix
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/where_phoenix.php



NASA Spacecraft Fine Tunes Course for Mars Landing
"PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA engineers have adjusted the flight path of the Phoenix Mars Lander, setting the spacecraft on course for its May 25 landing on the Red Planet."
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080410.html


Phoenix: Entry, Descent and Landing

"NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander is set to explore the Martian arctic, looking for signs of water and conditions favorable to life. But getting there won't be easy: in the international history of the space age, only five of 13 attempts to land on Mars have succeeded.
Phoenix will enter the Martian atmosphere at nearly 13,000 miles per hour, kicking off a seven-minute series of events that must slow the lander to five miles an hour before it's three legs reach the ground. It's the first attempt at a powered landing on Mars since the Viking missions of 1976."
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/phoenix_edl_gallery/



Back to Mars: After '99 failure, NASA sets sights on lander touchdown Sunday
"The system improvements on the lander stem from the results of a NASA review board, which investigated the failure of the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) mission"
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9088438&intsrc=hm_ts_head




Mars Today:The Whole Mars Catalog at Mars Today .com
http://www.marstoday.com/
Mars TV
http://www.mars.tv/




Foot-dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-like Hot Spring Deposits
"The silica discovery, announced briefly by NASA in 2007, is fully described in a multi-author paper that appears in the May 23, 2008 issue of the scientific journal Science. "
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522145222.htm

Science 23 May 2008:
Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars -- Squyres et al. 320 (5879): 1063 -- Science
"Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars
Mineral deposits on the martian surface can elucidate ancient environmental conditions on the planet. Opaline silica deposits (as much as 91 weight percent SiO2) have been found in association with volcanic materials by the Mars rover Spirit. The deposits are present both as light-toned soils and as bedrock. We interpret these materials to have formed under hydrothermal conditions and therefore to be strong indicators of a former aqueous environment. This discovery is important for understanding the past habitability of Mars because hydrothermal environments on Earth support thriving microbial ecosystems."
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/320/5879/1063

Hot Springs and Life? on Mars - TierneyLab - Science - New York Times Blog
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/22/hot-springs-and-life-on-mars/?hp




Adware.RougeSuspect
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\CLSID\{C7310572-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F}\InprocServer32
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSSearch\Bin\SRCHADM.DLL
Microsoft Search ObjCreator Class
ObjCreator.ObjCreator.1
参考例

Best Antivirus/Internet Securities for vista? [Archive] - The DVD Forums
"AdWare.RougeSuspect etc. This was a PC only connected to the internet to update AVG and Vista. Funny thing is though other spyware programmes dont report anything. When I send them to quarantine they are not files.
AVG is good but it see's innocent files as spyware."
http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:eYFgmeHf1IcJ:www.thedvdforums.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-477224.html+Adware.RougeSuspect&hl=ja&ct=clnk&cd=8

Yahoo! Answers - Adware.Rougesuspect ?
"Well i removed it but my computer is generally being much slower and im having sign in problems with hotmail and msn messenger.."
http://malaysia.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080507164715AAK1FzT



Mars Exploration: Missions
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/log/
火星への挑戦の記録 失敗多しッ
Launch Date Name Country Result Reason
1960 Korabl 4 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1960 Korabl 5 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1962 Korabl 11 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1962 Mars 1 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio Failed
1962 Korabl 13 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1964 Mariner 3 US (flyby) Failure Shroud failed to jettison
1964 Mariner 4 US (flyby) Success Returned 21 images
1964 Zond 2 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio failed
1969 Mars 1969A USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mars 1969B USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mariner 6 US (flyby) Success Returned 75 images
1969 Mariner 7 US (flyby) Success Returned 126 images
1971 Mariner 8 US Failure Launch failure
1971 Kosmos 419 USSR Failure Achieved Earth orbit only
1971 Mars 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure "Orbiter arrived, but no useful data and Lander destroyed"
1971 Mars 3 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success "Orbiter obtained approximately 8 months of data and lander landed safely, but only 20 seconds of data"
1971 Mariner 9 US Success "Returned 7,329 images"
1973 Mars 4 USSR Failure Flew past Mars
1973 Mars 5 USSR Success Returned 60 images; only lasted 9 days
1973 Mars 6 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success/Failure Occultation experiment produced data and Lander failure on descent
1973 Mars 7 Lander USSR Failure Missed planet; now in solar orbit.
1975 Viking 1 Orbiter/Lander US Success Located landing site for Lander and first successful landing on Mars
1975 Viking 2 Orbiter/Lander US Success "Returned 16,000 images and extensive atmospheric data and soil experiments"
1988 Phobos 1 Orbiter USSR Failure Lost en route to Mars
1988 Phobos 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure Lost near Phobos
1992 Mars Observer US Failure Lost prior to Mars arrival
1996 Mars Global Surveyor US Success More images than all Mars Missions
1996 Mars 96 USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1996 Mars Pathfinder US Success Technology experiment lasting 5 times longer than warranty
1998 Nozomi Japan Failure No orbit insertion; fuel problems
1998 Mars Climate Orbiter US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Mars Polar Lander US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Deep Space 2 Probes (2) US Failure Lost on arrival (carried on Mars Polar Lander)
2001 Mars Odyssey US Success High resolution images of Mars
2003 Mars Express Orbiter/Beagle 2 Lander ESA Success/Failure Orbiter imaging Mars in detail and lander lost on arrival
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Spirit US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Opportunity US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter US Success Returned more than 26 terabits of data (more than all other Mars missions combined)
2007 Phoenix Mars Lander US TBD





Credit: NASA, NASA TV











"Event Time (UTC) Time (PST)
Cruise Stage Separation 23:39:17 16:39:17
Turn-to-Entry 23:39:47 16:39:47
Entry 23:46:17 16:46:17
Nominal Plasma Black out start 23:47:05 16:47:05
Nominal Plasma Black out end 23:49:05 16:49:05
Nominal Heatshield Deployment 23:50:12 16:50:12
Nominal Lander Leg Deployment 23:50:22 16:50:22
Nominal Lander Separation 23:52:50 16:52:50
Nominal Touch Down 23:53:33 16:53:33"
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/blogs/20080525.html
Phoenix was on track for anticipated entry into the atmosphere at 4:30p.m. Pacific Time and reaching the surface at 4:38 p.m., although confirmation of those events comes no sooner than 15 minutes, 20 seconds later, due to the time needed for radio signals to travel from Mars to Earth.




1.28 million miles left to travel out of its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars.
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/


May 25, Landing on Mars at approximately 7:53 p.m. (4:53 p.m. Pacific)
日本時間5/26 8:53am
Landing Press Kit (3Mb)
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/226508main_phoenix-landing1.pdf

Flight System

Phoenix Lander

Landing on Mars

NASA - Phoenix Landing Events Schedule
May 21-26, 2008
Trajectory correction maneuver opportunity (TCM6X), 8:46 a.m.
News briefing, noon
Begin non-commentary live television feed from JPL control room, 3 p.m.
Begin commentated live television feed from JPL control room, 3:30 p.m.
Propulsion system pressurization, 4:16 p.m.
Begin "bent-pipe" relay relay (continuous transmission of Phoenix data as it is received) through NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft to Goldstone, Calif., Deep Space Network station, 4:38 p.m.
Green Bank, W. Va., radio telescope listening for direct UHF from Phoenix, 4:38 p.m.
Cruise stage separates, 4:39 p.m.
Spacecraft turns to attitude for atmospheric entry, 4:40 p.m.
Spacecraft enters atmosphere, 4:46:33 p.m.
Likely blackout period as hot plasma surrounds spacecraft, 4:47 through 4:49 p.m.
Parachute deploys, 4:50:15 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Heat shield jettisoned, 4:50:30 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Legs deploy, 4:50:40 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds. -
Radar activated, 4:51:30 p.m.
Lander separates from backshell, 4:53:09 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Transmission gap during switch to helix antenna 4:53:08 to 4:53:14 p.m.
Descent thrusters throttle up, 4:53:12 p.m.
Constant-velocity phase starts, 4:53:34 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Touchdown, 4:53:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Lander radio off 4:54:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Begin opening solar arrays (during radio silence) 5:13 p.m.
Begin NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:28 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Begin Europe's Mars Express spacecraft playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:30 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Post-landing poll of subsystem teams about spacecraft status, 5:30 p.m.
Mars Odyssey "bent-pipe" relay of transmission from Phoenix, with engineering data and possibly including first images, 6:43 to 7:02 p.m. Data could take up to about 30 additional minutes in pipeline before being accessible. If all goes well, live television feed from control room may show first images as they are received. The first images to be taken after landing will be of solar arrays, to check deployment status.
News briefing, 9 p.m.

Mars Phoenix Lander
May 25, Sunday
3 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - JPL
6 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL (Media Channel)
6:30 - 8:45 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL
9:30 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - First Downlink of Data - JPL
May 26, Monday
6 - 10 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Live Satellite Interviews - JPL (Media Channel)
12 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Post Landing Briefing - JPL
2 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Update Briefing - JPL




Phoenix Lands on Mars: May 25
NASA TV coverage begins 3:30 p.m.





Credit NASA
Phoenix Mission - Science News Briefing
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
NASA's Phoenix lander is getting ready to touch down on Mars and begin an unprecedented investigation of the Red Planet's arctic realm.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/13may_phoenix.htm?list1073247
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
Phoenix Mars Mission - Where is Phoenix
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/where_phoenix.php



NASA Spacecraft Fine Tunes Course for Mars Landing
"PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA engineers have adjusted the flight path of the Phoenix Mars Lander, setting the spacecraft on course for its May 25 landing on the Red Planet."
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080410.html


Phoenix: Entry, Descent and Landing

"NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander is set to explore the Martian arctic, looking for signs of water and conditions favorable to life. But getting there won't be easy: in the international history of the space age, only five of 13 attempts to land on Mars have succeeded.
Phoenix will enter the Martian atmosphere at nearly 13,000 miles per hour, kicking off a seven-minute series of events that must slow the lander to five miles an hour before it's three legs reach the ground. It's the first attempt at a powered landing on Mars since the Viking missions of 1976."
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/phoenix_edl_gallery/



Back to Mars: After '99 failure, NASA sets sights on lander touchdown Sunday
"The system improvements on the lander stem from the results of a NASA review board, which investigated the failure of the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) mission"
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9088438&intsrc=hm_ts_head




Mars Today:The Whole Mars Catalog at Mars Today .com
http://www.marstoday.com/
Mars TV
http://www.mars.tv/




Foot-dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-like Hot Spring Deposits
"The silica discovery, announced briefly by NASA in 2007, is fully described in a multi-author paper that appears in the May 23, 2008 issue of the scientific journal Science. "
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522145222.htm

Science 23 May 2008:
Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars -- Squyres et al. 320 (5879): 1063 -- Science
"Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars
Mineral deposits on the martian surface can elucidate ancient environmental conditions on the planet. Opaline silica deposits (as much as 91 weight percent SiO2) have been found in association with volcanic materials by the Mars rover Spirit. The deposits are present both as light-toned soils and as bedrock. We interpret these materials to have formed under hydrothermal conditions and therefore to be strong indicators of a former aqueous environment. This discovery is important for understanding the past habitability of Mars because hydrothermal environments on Earth support thriving microbial ecosystems."
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/320/5879/1063

Hot Springs and Life? on Mars - TierneyLab - Science - New York Times Blog
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/22/hot-springs-and-life-on-mars/?hp




Adware.RougeSuspect
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\CLSID\{C7310572-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F}\InprocServer32
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSSearch\Bin\SRCHADM.DLL
Microsoft Search ObjCreator Class
ObjCreator.ObjCreator.1
参考例

Best Antivirus/Internet Securities for vista? [Archive] - The DVD Forums
"AdWare.RougeSuspect etc. This was a PC only connected to the internet to update AVG and Vista. Funny thing is though other spyware programmes dont report anything. When I send them to quarantine they are not files.
AVG is good but it see's innocent files as spyware."
http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:eYFgmeHf1IcJ:www.thedvdforums.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-477224.html+Adware.RougeSuspect&hl=ja&ct=clnk&cd=8

Yahoo! Answers - Adware.Rougesuspect ?
"Well i removed it but my computer is generally being much slower and im having sign in problems with hotmail and msn messenger.."
http://malaysia.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080507164715AAK1FzT



Mars Exploration: Missions
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/log/
火星への挑戦の記録 失敗多しッ
Launch Date Name Country Result Reason
1960 Korabl 4 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1960 Korabl 5 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1962 Korabl 11 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1962 Mars 1 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio Failed
1962 Korabl 13 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1964 Mariner 3 US (flyby) Failure Shroud failed to jettison
1964 Mariner 4 US (flyby) Success Returned 21 images
1964 Zond 2 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio failed
1969 Mars 1969A USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mars 1969B USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mariner 6 US (flyby) Success Returned 75 images
1969 Mariner 7 US (flyby) Success Returned 126 images
1971 Mariner 8 US Failure Launch failure
1971 Kosmos 419 USSR Failure Achieved Earth orbit only
1971 Mars 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure "Orbiter arrived, but no useful data and Lander destroyed"
1971 Mars 3 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success "Orbiter obtained approximately 8 months of data and lander landed safely, but only 20 seconds of data"
1971 Mariner 9 US Success "Returned 7,329 images"
1973 Mars 4 USSR Failure Flew past Mars
1973 Mars 5 USSR Success Returned 60 images; only lasted 9 days
1973 Mars 6 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success/Failure Occultation experiment produced data and Lander failure on descent
1973 Mars 7 Lander USSR Failure Missed planet; now in solar orbit.
1975 Viking 1 Orbiter/Lander US Success Located landing site for Lander and first successful landing on Mars
1975 Viking 2 Orbiter/Lander US Success "Returned 16,000 images and extensive atmospheric data and soil experiments"
1988 Phobos 1 Orbiter USSR Failure Lost en route to Mars
1988 Phobos 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure Lost near Phobos
1992 Mars Observer US Failure Lost prior to Mars arrival
1996 Mars Global Surveyor US Success More images than all Mars Missions
1996 Mars 96 USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1996 Mars Pathfinder US Success Technology experiment lasting 5 times longer than warranty
1998 Nozomi Japan Failure No orbit insertion; fuel problems
1998 Mars Climate Orbiter US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Mars Polar Lander US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Deep Space 2 Probes (2) US Failure Lost on arrival (carried on Mars Polar Lander)
2001 Mars Odyssey US Success High resolution images of Mars
2003 Mars Express Orbiter/Beagle 2 Lander ESA Success/Failure Orbiter imaging Mars in detail and lander lost on arrival
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Spirit US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Opportunity US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter US Success Returned more than 26 terabits of data (more than all other Mars missions combined)
2007 Phoenix Mars Lander US TBD





Credit: NASA, NASA TV




"Event Time (UTC) Time (PST)
Cruise Stage Separation 23:39:17 16:39:17
Turn-to-Entry 23:39:47 16:39:47
Entry 23:46:17 16:46:17
Nominal Plasma Black out start 23:47:05 16:47:05
Nominal Plasma Black out end 23:49:05 16:49:05
Nominal Heatshield Deployment 23:50:12 16:50:12
Nominal Lander Leg Deployment 23:50:22 16:50:22
Nominal Lander Separation 23:52:50 16:52:50
Nominal Touch Down 23:53:33 16:53:33"
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/blogs/20080525.html
Phoenix was on track for anticipated entry into the atmosphere at 4:30p.m. Pacific Time and reaching the surface at 4:38 p.m., although confirmation of those events comes no sooner than 15 minutes, 20 seconds later, due to the time needed for radio signals to travel from Mars to Earth.




1.28 million miles left to travel out of its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars.
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/


May 25, Landing on Mars at approximately 7:53 p.m. (4:53 p.m. Pacific)
日本時間5/26 8:53am
Landing Press Kit (3Mb)
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/226508main_phoenix-landing1.pdf

Flight System

Phoenix Lander

Landing on Mars

NASA - Phoenix Landing Events Schedule
May 21-26, 2008
Trajectory correction maneuver opportunity (TCM6X), 8:46 a.m.
News briefing, noon
Begin non-commentary live television feed from JPL control room, 3 p.m.
Begin commentated live television feed from JPL control room, 3:30 p.m.
Propulsion system pressurization, 4:16 p.m.
Begin "bent-pipe" relay relay (continuous transmission of Phoenix data as it is received) through NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft to Goldstone, Calif., Deep Space Network station, 4:38 p.m.
Green Bank, W. Va., radio telescope listening for direct UHF from Phoenix, 4:38 p.m.
Cruise stage separates, 4:39 p.m.
Spacecraft turns to attitude for atmospheric entry, 4:40 p.m.
Spacecraft enters atmosphere, 4:46:33 p.m.
Likely blackout period as hot plasma surrounds spacecraft, 4:47 through 4:49 p.m.
Parachute deploys, 4:50:15 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Heat shield jettisoned, 4:50:30 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Legs deploy, 4:50:40 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds. -
Radar activated, 4:51:30 p.m.
Lander separates from backshell, 4:53:09 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Transmission gap during switch to helix antenna 4:53:08 to 4:53:14 p.m.
Descent thrusters throttle up, 4:53:12 p.m.
Constant-velocity phase starts, 4:53:34 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Touchdown, 4:53:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Lander radio off 4:54:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Begin opening solar arrays (during radio silence) 5:13 p.m.
Begin NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:28 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Begin Europe's Mars Express spacecraft playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:30 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Post-landing poll of subsystem teams about spacecraft status, 5:30 p.m.
Mars Odyssey "bent-pipe" relay of transmission from Phoenix, with engineering data and possibly including first images, 6:43 to 7:02 p.m. Data could take up to about 30 additional minutes in pipeline before being accessible. If all goes well, live television feed from control room may show first images as they are received. The first images to be taken after landing will be of solar arrays, to check deployment status.
News briefing, 9 p.m.

Mars Phoenix Lander
May 25, Sunday
3 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - JPL
6 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL (Media Channel)
6:30 - 8:45 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL
9:30 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - First Downlink of Data - JPL
May 26, Monday
6 - 10 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Live Satellite Interviews - JPL (Media Channel)
12 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Post Landing Briefing - JPL
2 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Update Briefing - JPL




Phoenix Lands on Mars: May 25
NASA TV coverage begins 3:30 p.m.





Credit NASA
Phoenix Mission - Science News Briefing
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
NASA's Phoenix lander is getting ready to touch down on Mars and begin an unprecedented investigation of the Red Planet's arctic realm.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/13may_phoenix.htm?list1073247
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
Phoenix Mars Mission - Where is Phoenix
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/where_phoenix.php



NASA Spacecraft Fine Tunes Course for Mars Landing
"PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA engineers have adjusted the flight path of the Phoenix Mars Lander, setting the spacecraft on course for its May 25 landing on the Red Planet."
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080410.html


Phoenix: Entry, Descent and Landing

"NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander is set to explore the Martian arctic, looking for signs of water and conditions favorable to life. But getting there won't be easy: in the international history of the space age, only five of 13 attempts to land on Mars have succeeded.
Phoenix will enter the Martian atmosphere at nearly 13,000 miles per hour, kicking off a seven-minute series of events that must slow the lander to five miles an hour before it's three legs reach the ground. It's the first attempt at a powered landing on Mars since the Viking missions of 1976."
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/phoenix_edl_gallery/



Back to Mars: After '99 failure, NASA sets sights on lander touchdown Sunday
"The system improvements on the lander stem from the results of a NASA review board, which investigated the failure of the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) mission"
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9088438&intsrc=hm_ts_head




Mars Today:The Whole Mars Catalog at Mars Today .com
http://www.marstoday.com/
Mars TV
http://www.mars.tv/




Foot-dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-like Hot Spring Deposits
"The silica discovery, announced briefly by NASA in 2007, is fully described in a multi-author paper that appears in the May 23, 2008 issue of the scientific journal Science. "
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522145222.htm

Science 23 May 2008:
Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars -- Squyres et al. 320 (5879): 1063 -- Science
"Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars
Mineral deposits on the martian surface can elucidate ancient environmental conditions on the planet. Opaline silica deposits (as much as 91 weight percent SiO2) have been found in association with volcanic materials by the Mars rover Spirit. The deposits are present both as light-toned soils and as bedrock. We interpret these materials to have formed under hydrothermal conditions and therefore to be strong indicators of a former aqueous environment. This discovery is important for understanding the past habitability of Mars because hydrothermal environments on Earth support thriving microbial ecosystems."
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/320/5879/1063

Hot Springs and Life? on Mars - TierneyLab - Science - New York Times Blog
http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/22/hot-springs-and-life-on-mars/?hp




Adware.RougeSuspect
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\CLSID\{C7310572-AC80-11D1-8DF3-00C04FB6EF4F}\InprocServer32
C:\Program Files\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\MSSearch\Bin\SRCHADM.DLL
Microsoft Search ObjCreator Class
ObjCreator.ObjCreator.1
参考例

Best Antivirus/Internet Securities for vista? [Archive] - The DVD Forums
"AdWare.RougeSuspect etc. This was a PC only connected to the internet to update AVG and Vista. Funny thing is though other spyware programmes dont report anything. When I send them to quarantine they are not files.
AVG is good but it see's innocent files as spyware."
http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:eYFgmeHf1IcJ:www.thedvdforums.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-477224.html+Adware.RougeSuspect&hl=ja&ct=clnk&cd=8

Yahoo! Answers - Adware.Rougesuspect ?
"Well i removed it but my computer is generally being much slower and im having sign in problems with hotmail and msn messenger.."
http://malaysia.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080507164715AAK1FzT



Mars Exploration: Missions
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/log/
火星への挑戦の記録 失敗多しッ
Launch Date Name Country Result Reason
1960 Korabl 4 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1960 Korabl 5 USSR (flyby) Failure Didn't reach Earth orbit
1962 Korabl 11 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1962 Mars 1 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio Failed
1962 Korabl 13 USSR (flyby) Failure Earth orbit only; spacecraft broke apart
1964 Mariner 3 US (flyby) Failure Shroud failed to jettison
1964 Mariner 4 US (flyby) Success Returned 21 images
1964 Zond 2 USSR (flyby) Failure Radio failed
1969 Mars 1969A USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mars 1969B USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1969 Mariner 6 US (flyby) Success Returned 75 images
1969 Mariner 7 US (flyby) Success Returned 126 images
1971 Mariner 8 US Failure Launch failure
1971 Kosmos 419 USSR Failure Achieved Earth orbit only
1971 Mars 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure "Orbiter arrived, but no useful data and Lander destroyed"
1971 Mars 3 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success "Orbiter obtained approximately 8 months of data and lander landed safely, but only 20 seconds of data"
1971 Mariner 9 US Success "Returned 7,329 images"
1973 Mars 4 USSR Failure Flew past Mars
1973 Mars 5 USSR Success Returned 60 images; only lasted 9 days
1973 Mars 6 Orbiter/Lander USSR Success/Failure Occultation experiment produced data and Lander failure on descent
1973 Mars 7 Lander USSR Failure Missed planet; now in solar orbit.
1975 Viking 1 Orbiter/Lander US Success Located landing site for Lander and first successful landing on Mars
1975 Viking 2 Orbiter/Lander US Success "Returned 16,000 images and extensive atmospheric data and soil experiments"
1988 Phobos 1 Orbiter USSR Failure Lost en route to Mars
1988 Phobos 2 Orbiter/Lander USSR Failure Lost near Phobos
1992 Mars Observer US Failure Lost prior to Mars arrival
1996 Mars Global Surveyor US Success More images than all Mars Missions
1996 Mars 96 USSR Failure Launch vehicle failure
1996 Mars Pathfinder US Success Technology experiment lasting 5 times longer than warranty
1998 Nozomi Japan Failure No orbit insertion; fuel problems
1998 Mars Climate Orbiter US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Mars Polar Lander US Failure Lost on arrival
1999 Deep Space 2 Probes (2) US Failure Lost on arrival (carried on Mars Polar Lander)
2001 Mars Odyssey US Success High resolution images of Mars
2003 Mars Express Orbiter/Beagle 2 Lander ESA Success/Failure Orbiter imaging Mars in detail and lander lost on arrival
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Spirit US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2003 Mars Exploration Rover - Opportunity US Success Operating lifetime of more than 15 times original warranty
2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter US Success Returned more than 26 terabits of data (more than all other Mars missions combined)
2007 Phoenix Mars Lander US TBD





Credit: NASA, NASA TV




"Event Time (UTC) Time (PST)
Cruise Stage Separation 23:39:17 16:39:17
Turn-to-Entry 23:39:47 16:39:47
Entry 23:46:17 16:46:17
Nominal Plasma Black out start 23:47:05 16:47:05
Nominal Plasma Black out end 23:49:05 16:49:05
Nominal Heatshield Deployment 23:50:12 16:50:12
Nominal Lander Leg Deployment 23:50:22 16:50:22
Nominal Lander Separation 23:52:50 16:52:50
Nominal Touch Down 23:53:33 16:53:33"
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/blogs/20080525.html
Phoenix was on track for anticipated entry into the atmosphere at 4:30p.m. Pacific Time and reaching the surface at 4:38 p.m., although confirmation of those events comes no sooner than 15 minutes, 20 seconds later, due to the time needed for radio signals to travel from Mars to Earth.




1.28 million miles left to travel out of its 422-million-mile flight from Earth to Mars.
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/


May 25, Landing on Mars at approximately 7:53 p.m. (4:53 p.m. Pacific)
日本時間5/26 8:53am
Landing Press Kit (3Mb)
http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/226508main_phoenix-landing1.pdf

Flight System

Phoenix Lander

Landing on Mars

NASA - Phoenix Landing Events Schedule
May 21-26, 2008
Trajectory correction maneuver opportunity (TCM6X), 8:46 a.m.
News briefing, noon
Begin non-commentary live television feed from JPL control room, 3 p.m.
Begin commentated live television feed from JPL control room, 3:30 p.m.
Propulsion system pressurization, 4:16 p.m.
Begin "bent-pipe" relay relay (continuous transmission of Phoenix data as it is received) through NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft to Goldstone, Calif., Deep Space Network station, 4:38 p.m.
Green Bank, W. Va., radio telescope listening for direct UHF from Phoenix, 4:38 p.m.
Cruise stage separates, 4:39 p.m.
Spacecraft turns to attitude for atmospheric entry, 4:40 p.m.
Spacecraft enters atmosphere, 4:46:33 p.m.
Likely blackout period as hot plasma surrounds spacecraft, 4:47 through 4:49 p.m.
Parachute deploys, 4:50:15 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Heat shield jettisoned, 4:50:30 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds.
Legs deploy, 4:50:40 p.m., plus or minus about 13 seconds. -
Radar activated, 4:51:30 p.m.
Lander separates from backshell, 4:53:09 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Transmission gap during switch to helix antenna 4:53:08 to 4:53:14 p.m.
Descent thrusters throttle up, 4:53:12 p.m.
Constant-velocity phase starts, 4:53:34 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Touchdown, 4:53:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Lander radio off 4:54:52 p.m., plus or minus about 46 seconds.
Begin opening solar arrays (during radio silence) 5:13 p.m.
Begin NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:28 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Begin Europe's Mars Express spacecraft playback of Phoenix transmissions recorded during entry, descent and landing, 5:30 p.m. However, data for analysis will not be ready until several hours later.
Post-landing poll of subsystem teams about spacecraft status, 5:30 p.m.
Mars Odyssey "bent-pipe" relay of transmission from Phoenix, with engineering data and possibly including first images, 6:43 to 7:02 p.m. Data could take up to about 30 additional minutes in pipeline before being accessible. If all goes well, live television feed from control room may show first images as they are received. The first images to be taken after landing will be of solar arrays, to check deployment status.
News briefing, 9 p.m.

Mars Phoenix Lander
May 25, Sunday
3 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - JPL
6 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL (Media Channel)
6:30 - 8:45 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Landing Coverage - JPL
9:30 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Briefing - First Downlink of Data - JPL
May 26, Monday
6 - 10 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Live Satellite Interviews - JPL (Media Channel)
12 a.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Post Landing Briefing - JPL
2 p.m. - Mars Phoenix Lander Update Briefing - JPL




Phoenix Lands on Mars: May 25
NASA TV coverage begins 3:30 p.m.





Credit NASA
Phoenix Mission - Science News Briefing
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
NASA's Phoenix lander is getting ready to touch down on Mars and begin an unprecedented investigation of the Red Planet's arctic realm.
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/13may_phoenix.htm?list1073247
Phoenix Mars Mission - Home
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/
Phoenix Mars Mission - Where is Phoenix
http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu/where_phoenix.php



NASA Spacecraft Fine Tunes Course for Mars Landing
"PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA engineers have adjusted the flight path of the Phoenix Mars Lander, setting the spacecraft on course for its May 25 landing on the Red Planet."
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080410.html


Phoenix: Entry, Descent and Landing

"NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander is set to explore the Martian arctic, looking for signs of water and conditions favorable to life. But getting there won't be easy: in the international history of the space age, only five of 13 attempts to land on Mars have succeeded.
Phoenix will enter the Martian atmosphere at nearly 13,000 miles per hour, kicking off a seven-minute series of events that must slow the lander to five miles an hour before it's three legs reach the ground. It's the first attempt at a powered landing on Mars since the Viking missions of 1976."
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/phoenix_edl_gallery/



Back to Mars: After '99 failure, NASA sets sights on lander touchdown Sunday
"The system improvements on the lander stem from the results of a NASA review board, which investigated the failure of the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) mission"
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9088438&intsrc=hm_ts_head




Mars Today:The Whole Mars Catalog at Mars Today .com
http://www.marstoday.com/
Mars TV
http://www.mars.tv/




Foot-dragging Mars Rover Finds Yellowstone-like Hot Spring Deposits
"The silica discovery, announced briefly by NASA in 2007, is fully described in a multi-author paper that appears in the May 23, 2008 issue of the scientific journal Science. "
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522145222.htm

Science 23 May 2008:
Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars