• Gullies on Mars could have been formed b

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Jun 29 22:30:24 2023
    Gullies on Mars could have been formed by recent periods of liquid
    meltwater, study suggests

    Date:
    June 29, 2023
    Source:
    Brown University
    Summary:
    A study offers new insights into how water from melting ice could
    have played a recent role in the formation of ravine-like channels
    that cut down the sides of impact craters on Mars.


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    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A study led by Brown University researchers offers new insights into how
    water from melting ice could have played a recent role in the formation of ravine- like channels that cut down the sides of impact craters on Mars.

    The study, published in Science, focuses on Martian gullies, which
    look eerily similar to gullies that form on Earth in the Dry Valleys of Antarctica and are caused by water erosion from melting glaciers. The researchers, including Brown planetary scientist Jim Head, built a model
    that simulates a sweet spot for when conditions on Mars allow the planet
    to warm above freezing temperatures, leading to periods of liquid water
    on Mars when ice on and beneath the surface melts.

    The scientists found that when Mars tilts on its axis to 35 degrees, the atmosphere becomes dense enough for brief episodes of melting to occur at
    gully locations. They then matched the data from their model to periods
    in Mars history when the gullies in the planet's Terra Sirenum region are believed to have expanded rapidly downhill from high elevation points --
    a phenomenon that could not be explained without the occasional presence
    of water.

    "We know from a lot of our research and other people's research that early
    on in Mars history, there was running water on the surface with valley
    networks and lakes," said Head, a professor of geological sciences at
    Brown. "But about 3 billion years ago, all of that liquid water was lost,
    and Mars became what we call a hyper-arid or polar desert. We show here
    that even after that and in the recent past, when Mars' axis tilts to 35 degrees, it heats up sufficiently to melt snow and ice, bringing liquid
    water back until temperatures drop and it freezes again." The findings
    help fill in some of the missing gaps on how these gullies formed,
    including how high they start, how severe the erosion is and how far
    they extend down the side of craters.

    Previous theories suggest Martian gullies were carved by carbon dioxide
    frost, which evaporates from soil, causing rock and rubble to slide
    down slopes. The height of the gullies made many scientists theorize
    that meltwater from glaciers had to be involved because of the distance
    they traveled down the slopes and how eroded the gullies looked. Proving
    liquid water could exist on Mars since it disappeared so long ago has
    been difficult because temperatures typically hover about 70 degrees
    below freezing.

    The results from the new study suggest that gully formation was driven
    by periods of melting ice and by CO2 frost evaporation in other parts
    of the year.

    The researchers found this has likely occurred repeatedly over the past
    several million years with the most recent occurrence about 630,000
    years ago.

    They say that if ice was present at gully locations in the areas they
    looked at when Mars' axis tilted to about 35 degrees, the conditions
    would have been right for the ice to melt because temperatures rose
    above 273 degrees Kelvin, equivalent to about 32 degrees Fahrenheit.

    "Our study shows that the global distribution of gullies is better
    explained by liquid water over the last million years," said Jay Dickson,
    the study's lead author and a former researcher at Brown who's now
    at California Institute of Technology. "Water explains the elevation distribution of gullies in ways that CO2 cannot. This means that Mars has
    been able to create liquid water in enough volume to erode channels within
    the last million years, which is very recent on the scale of Mars geologic history." Despite doubts about meltwater being possible and scientists
    never being able to model the right conditions on Mars for ice to melt,
    the researchers were convinced that the meltwater theory was accurate
    because they had seen similar features firsthand in Antarctica. There,
    despite the cold temperatures, the sun is able to heat ice just enough
    for it to melt and for gully activity to occur.

    The new study is a continuation of previous research the team started
    decades earlier looking at Martian gullies. In a 2015 study, for instance,
    the researchers showed it was possible that there may have been past
    periods on Mars when water was available to form gullies if Mars tilted on
    its axis enough. The findings encouraged them to model what that tilt was
    and match it with the locations and altitudes of gullies that have formed.

    The paper raises anew the fundamental question of whether life could
    exist on Mars. This is because life, as it's known on Earth, goes hand
    in hand with the presence of liquid water. Mars will eventually tilt to
    35 degrees again, the researchers said.

    "Could there be a bridge, if you will, between the early warm and wet
    Mars and the Mars that we see today in terms of liquid water?" Head
    said. "Everybody's always looking for environments that could be conducive
    to not just the formation of life but the preservation and continuation
    of it. Any microorganism that might have evolved in early Mars is
    going to be in places where they can be comfortable in ice and then
    also comfortable or prosperous in liquid water. In the frigid Antarctic environment, for example, the few organisms that exist often occur in
    stasis, waiting for water." The study also introduces the importance
    of these gullies in terms of potential targets to visit during future exploration missions on Mars.

    The study included funding from the NASA Mars Data Analysis Program. Other Brown-affiliated authors include former graduate students Ashley Palumbo
    and Laura Kerber, former graduate student and postdoctoral researcher
    Caleb Fassett and visiting researcher Mikhail Kreslavsky, a planetary
    scientist at University of California, Santa Cruz.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Space_&_Time
    # Mars # Solar_System # Space_Missions # NASA #
    Space_Exploration # Astronomy # Space_Probes # Mercury
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Phoenix_(spacecraft) o Deimos_(moon) o Phobos_(moon)
    o Solar_system o Mars_Exploration_Rover o Mars o
    Exploration_of_Mars o Astronomy

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Brown_University. Note: Content may
    be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * Terra_Sirenum_and_its_gullies ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. J. L. Dickson, A. M. Palumbo, J. W. Head, L. Kerber, C. I. Fassett,
    M. A.

    Kreslavsky. Gullies on Mars could have formed by melting of water
    ice during periods of high obliquity. Science, 2023; 380 (6652):
    1363 DOI: 10.1126/science.abk2464 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230629193235.htm

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