Guy Webster 818-354-6278 Dwayne Brown 202-358-1726 Sara Hammond 520-626-1974 NEWS RELEASE: 2008-104 June 11, 2008 NASA's "We have an oven full," Boynton leads the Thermal and Evolved-Gas Analyzer instrument, or TEGA, for The lander's Robotic Arm delivered a partial scoopful of clumpy soil from a trench informally called "Baby Bear" to the number 4 oven on TEGA last Friday, June 6, which was 12 days after landing. A screen covers each of TEGA's eight ovens. The screen is to prevent larger bits of soil from clogging the narrow port to each oven so that fine particles fill the oven cavity, which is no wider than a pencil lead. Each TEGA chute also has a whirligig mechanism that vibrates the screen to help shake small particles through. Only a few particles got through when the screen on oven number 4 was vibrated on June 6, 8 and 9. Boynton said that the oven might have filled because of the cumulative effects of all the vibrating, or because of changes in the soil's cohesiveness as it sat for days on the top of the screen. "There's something very unusual about this soil, from a place on Mars we've never been before," said Phoenix Principal Investigator Peter Smith of the Plans prepared by the The
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