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Beagle 2 lander
As soon as it came to a halt on the Martian surface, however, Beagle 2's outer casing was due to open to reveal the inner workings. First, solar panels would unfold: they catch sunlight to charge the batteries which would power the lander and its experiments throughout the mission. Next, a robotic arm would spring to life.
Attached to the end of the arm was the Beagle's Payload Adjustable Workbench (PAW) where most of the experiments were situated. These included a pair of stereo cameras, a microscope, two types of spectrometer (Mössbauer and X-ray) and a torch to illuminate surfaces. The PAW also housed the corer/grinder and 'the mole', two instruments for collecting rock and soil samples for analysis.
When a suitable rock was chosen, the PAW would rotate until the grinder was in position to grind away the weathered surface. The PAW could then reposition for the microscope or spectrometers to analyse the freshly exposed material.
When a rock looked particularly interesting, a sample would have been drilled out with the corer and taken to the gas analysis package (GAP) inside the shell of the lander by means of the robotic arm. 'The mole', carried on the back of the PAW, would also collect soil samples and return them to the GAP.
Gas analysis package This is where investigations most relevant to detecting past or present life would have been conducted. The instrument has twelve ovens in which rock or soil samples can be heated gradually in the presence of oxygen. The carbon dioxide generated at each temperature would be delivered to a mass spectrometer which would measure its abundance and the ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-13. The mass spectrometer would have also studied other elements and look for methane in samples of atmosphere. The temperature at which the carbon dioxide is generated would reveal its nature, as different carbon bearing materials combust at different temperatures.
Environmental sensors
Two stereo cameras These cameras would provide digital pictures from which a 3D model of the area within reach of the robotic arm may be constructed. As the PAW cannot be operated in real time from Earth, this 3D model would be used to guide the instruments into position alongside target rocks and soil and to provide information on the geological setting of the landing site.
Microscope
The Mössbauer Spectrometer
X-ray spectrometer This would measure the elements in rocks by bombarding exposed rock surfaces with X-rays from four radioactive sources (two iron-55 and two cadmium-109). The rocks would emit lower energy X-rays, characteristic of the elements present. Rock ages could be estimated using the property that the isotope potassium-40 decays to argon-40. The X-ray spectrometer would provide the potassium measurement and the GAP would measure argon trapped in rocks.
Mole
Corer/grinder
Last update: 19 October 2004
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