Showing posts with label H2O. Show all posts
Showing posts with label H2O. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

NASA Mars HiRise: Study of Aeolis Dorsa and Halcyon times

This NASA image obtained by the Mars HiRISE camera March 13, 2014 shows a sand dune field in a Southern highlands crater on Mars

Cold and dry today, Mars was previously warm and wet but possibly only at intervals, a study published on Sunday suggests.

Scientists have long puzzled over what happened to the water, the precious stuff of life, on the Red Planet.

Unmanned spacecraft have sent home tantalising images of gouged canyons, valleys and sedimentary deltas, while landers have found hydrous rocks, all suggesting Mars at one time hosted hundreds of kilometres (miles) of rivers and lakes.

Today, though, Mars is too cold and the pressure of its carbon-dioxide atmosphere way too low for liquid H2O to exist. If you tried to pour water on its surface, it would simultaneously freeze and vapourise.

So when did Mars host liquid water? And what happened to it?
In a study published in the journal Nature Geoscience, planetary geologist Edwin Kite of the California Institute of Technology takes a new stab at the riddle.

Edwin Kite
Kite and his team measured craters, left on the Martian surface by asteroid collisions, to gain an idea of its past atmospheric pressure.

The principle behind their calculation is this: the thicker the atmosphere, the bigger the space rock has to be to survive the friction of contact with it.

Conversely, a thinner atmosphere means that smaller rocks are able to survive the descent and whack the surface.

Aeolis Dorsa
Kite's team looked at 319 craters in Aeolis Dorsa, a 3.6-billion-year-old region that shows evidence of past rivers to get an indication.

Mystery of flowing water They calculated that these craters were formed when Mars had atmospheric pressure of up to 0.9 bar.

This pressure is 150 times greater than that of today and intriguingly close to that of the water-rich Planet Earth at sea level.

The bad news, though, is that Mars is far more distant from the Sun than Earth and at that far-off time, our star was much less bright than now.

As a result, Mars would have required pressures of at least five bar for its surface to keep above the freezing point of water. It seems to have lacked a long-lasting thick atmosphere during its river period.

"If Mars did not have a stable multi-bar atmosphere at the time that the rivers were flowing—as suggested by our results—then a warm and wet CO2/H2O greenhouse is ruled out, and long-term average temperatures were most likely below freezing," said the study.

Sanjoy Som
This throws up other possible explanations for the water, said Sanjoy Som of NASA Ames Research Center in a commentary published in the same journal.

One is that the water was high in acidity and salt content, giving it a lower freezing point and enabling it survive as a liquid in lower air pressure.

Another is that greenhouse gases from volcanic eruptions helped Mars, for a while, to have a denser atmosphere that enabled the water to flow.

Another possibility is "transient intervals" of denser atmosphere caused by the planet's tilt, said Som.

Like a child's top that is slightly off centre, Mars tilts slowly around its axis of spin.

It takes 120,000 years to complete one axial revolution, a timescale that leads to major changes in the amount of sunlight reaching its poles, whose water either froze to form ice-sheets or warmed to "reinflate" the atmosphere and form rivers that flowed at kinder times.

More information: Nature paper: Low palaeopressure of the martian atmosphere estimated from the size distribution of ancient craters, www.nature.com

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

NASA LRO: Wet or Dry Moon

The Moon's status as a "dry" rock in space has long been questioned. Competing theories abound as to the source of the H20 in the lunar soil, including delivery of water to the Moon by comets.

This week, Tartèse et al announced in Geology that new analyses of lunar soil samples demonstrates that basalts from the Moon's mantle contain hydrogen from water indigenous to Earth.

According to the authors, their work is "challenging the paradigm of a "dry" Moon, and arguing that some portions of the lunar interior are as wet as some regions of the Earth's mantle."


This video from NASA Goddard shows how NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) is helping scientists understand where water is likely to exist on the south pole of the Moon. 

Credit: NASA Goddard on YouTube

Since the 1960's, scientists have suspected that frozen water could survive in cold, dark craters at the Moon's poles.

While previous lunar missions have detected hints of water on the Moon, new data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) pinpoints areas near the south pole where water is likely to exist.

The key to this discovery is hydrogen, the main ingredient in water: LRO uses its Lunar Exploration Neutron Detector (LEND), to measure how much hydrogen is trapped within the lunar soil.

By combining years of LEND data, scientists see mounting evidence of hydrogen-rich areas near the Moon's south pole, strongly suggesting the presence of frozen water.

More information: Romain Tartèse, Mahesh Anand, Francis M. McCubbin, Stephen M. Elardo, Charles K. Shearer, and Ian A. Franchi. "Apatites in lunar KREEP basalts: The missing link to understanding the H isotope systematics of the Moon." Geology, G35288.1, first published on February 25, 2014, DOI: 10.1130/G35288.1