Mark Henderson, Science Editor
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Many scientists and astronomers are happy to admit to believing that there is – or, at least, that there has been – life on Mars, even if the proof has yet to be found.
No firm evidence for the existence of microbes or even organic chemicals has yet been found on the Red Planet, but there is surprising faith among researchers who study it that such discoveries will be made just as soon as humanity can get the right technology to the right place.
Some base their confidence on tantalising hints of organic material among the data collected by the Viking missions of 1976, though nothing conclusive was found.
Others have been convinced by the recent successes of a flotilla of spacecraft sent to Mars over the past decade. The orbiters Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Odyssey and Mars Express, and the Spirit and Opportunity rovers, have proved beyond doubt that the cold and arid planet was once warmer and wetter.
Some water, frozen as ice at the poles and below the surface, is known still to exist, and it is even thought that it may sometimes still thaw and bubble up in sudden torrents. Pictures taken in 1999 and 2005 show fresh channels apparently cut by running water.
All this is significant because, wherever there is liquid water on Earth there is also life – and widespread presence of one on Mars could thus prefigure the discovery of the other. Such organisms may be extinct, or they could be in suspended animation and be periodically revived when melting ice makes water available.
So far all the evidence for water has come at one remove, sensed remotely from orbit or from the rovers’ geological examination of rocks that have been affected by the planet’s wetter past. Humanity’s robots have yet to get their feet wet in actual Martian moisture – which is where Phoenix comes in. It has been deliberately sent to the north polar region of Mars, a place where there is plentiful water ice just beneath the surface.
The first pictures sent back by the spacecraft seem to confirm this. Though no ice can be seen on the surface, there is a pattern on polygon shapes on the ground that had been spotted from orbit. These are thought to have been formed by the freezing and thawing of soil.
Phoenix is fitted with a 2.35metre robotic arm, with which it can dig up to 50cm into the ground. This should be deep enough to reach the icy permafrost layer and study Martian water directly for the first time. The probe is not equipped to hunt for past or present life, but it will be capable of detecting chemical signatures of a habitable environment in the permafrost. It will also be studying the Martian weather at the poles.
The safe arrival of the spacecraft is a triumph in itself. Mars is sometimes known as the “Bermuda triangle” of space, such is the poor record of past missions. Only five previous attempts to land on the planet were successful, and many orbiters have been lost too. In 2003 Britain’s Beagle 2 probe failed to make contact after entering the Martian atmosphere, and Nasa’s Mars Polar Lander was lost in 1999.
The latest probe is also important as a test of landing technology. The most recent landers bounced to the surface shielded by protective airbags, but Phoenix made a soft landing, cushioned by retro-rockets that slowed its descent.
Phoenix is designed to operate for 90 Martian days, each of which lasts for about 40 minutes longer than an Earth day, though if the performances of Spirit and Opportunity are anything to go by it may keep experimenting for much longer. The two rovers were supposed to work for six months after landing in January 2004, and are still going strong more than four years later.

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Phoenix Lander TEGA Soil Sample delivery:
Could this sample delivery failure explain the negative results of the 1976 Viking Lander GCMS experiment; often cited as evidence of the absence of organic matter in the Martian soils?
simon watson, paisley, uk
" Pictures taken in 1999 and 2005 show fresh channels apparently cut by running water." Actually, I believe that what actually happened was that the first discovery was announced as some thing like 'possible evidence for liquid water on Mars ?' with a small footnote that said 'it might be due toCO2
Jonathan, Stirling,
It is possible for animals to remain in suspended animation for many years until rain comes. Several Australian frogs do this as they need water to reproduce and it only rains every few years. The phenomenon is called estivation.
jeremy, Manchester, UK
It is said that the people living on Mars are on higher, etheric, levels of the physical. If you go to Mars, it has been suggested, you will see no one, but nevertheless they exist and are in still physical matter.
Jaap den Haan, Namen,
Lets find life on Earth first !!!!
Ian Payne, WALSALL,
re: Jason, North Vancouver, Canada In the poles of our world there are several types of organisms that can be frozen during the winter and thaw during the warmer months and are still alive. These are also bigger than just single cell or similar organisms.
rob, Singapore,
Science has little to do with "Black Swan" questions. Evidence of life (what do you mean? Cells? RNA? Random proteins? Empty liposomes? Possible metabolites?) is interesting but sterile. Lack of evidence merely means ever bigger budgets spent on the search for evidence.
Ian Kemmish, Biggleswade, UK
It makes perfect sense to me why most scientists involved in this field would believe such a thing. It would be un-scientific to rule it out.
Carlos Cardoso
carlos cardoso, London, England
"...be in suspended animation and periodically revived when melting ice make water available to them again."
I'm not even close to being a scientist, but does this statement have even a remote chance of being possible or true?
Jason, North Vancouver, Canada
Is it not both practical and skeptical to believe that, given the evidence indicated in the article, there is or was most likely life on mars?
It makes perfect sense to me why most scientists involved in this field would believe such a thing. It would be un-scientific to rule it out.
Timothy, Johannesburg, South Africa
Mysterious Life of Universe!!
As Arthur Clark, a noted writer had said, Universe has mysterious things than imaginations! Let us see what surprises we will get soon!!
Damaji Pawar.
Damaji Pawar, Mumbaji, India
"Most scientists think ... life on Mars..."
EXCUSE ME??
Where did this statistic come from?
Many think the possibility of life on Mars is or was fair or better, but that's a long way from the article's statement.
Good scientists are both practical and skeptical.
Brian, Raleigh, USA