• Gauging the strength of ancient and acti

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Mon Jul 10 22:30:22 2023
    Gauging the strength of ancient and active rivers beyond Earth

    Date:
    July 10, 2023
    Source:
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Summary:
    A new technique allows scientists to see how intensely rivers used
    to flow on Mars, and how they currently flow on Titan. The method
    uses satellite observations to estimate the rate at which rivers
    move fluid and sediment downstream.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Rivers have flowed on two other worlds in the solar system besides Earth:
    Mars, where dry tracks and craters are all that's left of ancient rivers
    and lakes, and Titan, Saturn's largest moon, where rivers of liquid
    methane still flow today.

    A new technique developed by MIT geologists allows scientists to see
    how intensely rivers used to flow on Mars, and how they currently flow
    on Titan.

    The method uses satellite observations to estimate the rate at which
    rivers move fluid and sediment downstream.

    Applying their new technique, the MIT team calculated how fast and
    deep rivers were in certain regions on Mars more than 1 billion years
    ago. They also made similar estimates for currently active rivers on
    Titan, even though the moon's thick atmosphere and distance from Earth
    make it harder to explore, with far fewer available images of its surface
    than those of Mars.

    "What's exciting about Titan is that it's active. With this technique,
    we have a method to make real predictions for a place where we won't
    get more data for a long time," says Taylor Perron, the Cecil and
    Ida Green Professor in MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric and
    Planetary Sciences (EAPS). "And on Mars, it gives us a time machine,
    to take the rivers that are dead now and get a sense of what they were
    like when they were actively flowing." Perron and his colleagues have published their results today in the Proceedings of the National Academy
    of Sciences.Perron's MIT co-authors are first author Samuel Birch, Paul Corlies, and Jason Soderblom, with Rose Palermo and Andrew Ashton of the
    Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), Gary Parker of the University
    of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and collaborators from the University
    of California at Los Angeles, Yale University, and Cornell University.

    River math The team's study grew out of Perron and Birch's puzzlement
    over Titan's rivers.

    The images taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft have shown a curious
    lack of fan- shaped deltas at the mouths of most of the moon's rivers,
    contrary to many rivers on Earth. Could it be that Titan's rivers don't
    carry enough flow or sediment to build deltas? The group built on the
    work of co-author Gary Parker, who in the 2000s developed a series of mathematical equations to describe river flow on Earth.

    Parker had studied measurements of rivers taken directly in the field
    by others. From these data, he found there were certain universal
    relationships between a river's physical dimensions -- its width, depth,
    and slope -- and the rate at which it flowed. He drew up equations
    to describe these relationships mathematically, accounting for other
    variables such as the gravitational field acting on the river, and the
    size and density of the sediment being pushed along a river's bed.

    "This means that rivers with different gravity and materials should
    follow similar relationships," Perron says. "That opened up a
    possibility to apply this to other planets too." Getting a glimpse
    On Earth, geologists can make field measurements of a river's width,
    slope, and average sediment size, all of which can be fed into Parker's equations to accurately predict a river's flow rate, or how much water
    and sediment it can move downstream. But for rivers on other planets, measurements are more limited, and largely based on images and elevation measurements collected by remote satellites. For Mars, multiple orbiters
    have taken high-resolution images of the planet. For Titan, views are
    few and far between.

    Birch realized that any estimate of river flow on Mars or Titan would
    have to be based on the few characteristics that can be measured from
    remote images and topography -- namely, a river's width and slope. With
    some algebraic tinkering, he adapted Parker's equations to work only
    with width and slope inputs. He then assembled data from 491 rivers on
    Earth, tested the modified equations on these rivers, and found that the predictions based solely on each river's width and slope were accurate.

    Then, he applied the equations to Mars, and specifically, to the ancient
    rivers leading into Gale and Jezero Craters, both of which are thought
    to have been water-filled lakes billions of years ago. To predict the
    flow rate of each river, he plugged into the equations Mars' gravity,
    and estimates of each river's width and slope, based on images and
    elevation measurements taken by orbiting satellites.

    From their predictions of flow rate, the team found that rivers likely
    flowed for at least 100,000 years at Gale Crater and at least 1 million
    years at Jezero Crater -- long enough to have possibly supported
    life. They were also able to compare their predictions of the average
    size of sediment on each river's bed with actual field measurements of
    Martian grains near each river, taken by NASA's Curiosity and Perseverance rovers. These few field measurements allowed the team to check that
    their equations, applied on Mars, were accurate.

    The team then took their approach to Titan. They zeroed in on two
    locations where river slopes can be measured, including a river that
    flows into a lake the size of Lake Ontario. This river appears to form
    a delta as it feeds into the lake. However, the delta is one of only a
    few thought to exist on the moon -- nearly every viewable river flowing
    into a lake mysteriously lacks a delta.

    The team also applied their method to one of these other delta-less
    rivers.

    They calculated both rivers' flow and found that they may be comparable
    to some of the biggest rivers on Earth, with deltas estimated to have
    a flow rate as large as the Mississippi. Both rivers should move enough sediment to build up deltas. Yet, most rivers on Titan lack the fan-shaped deposits. Something else must be at work to explain this lack of river deposits.

    In another finding, the team calculated that rivers on Titan should be
    wider and have a gentler slope than rivers carrying the same flow on
    Earth or Mars.

    "Titan is the most Earth-like place," Birch says. "We've only gotten
    a glimpse of it. There's so much more that we know is down there, and
    this remote technique is pushing us a little closer." This research
    was supported, in part, by NASA and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Space_&_Time
    # Mars # Saturn # Space_Missions # Space_Exploration #
    NASA # Solar_System # Astronomy # Satellites
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Phobos_(moon) o Titan_(moon) o Mars o Mars_Exploration_Rover
    o Moon o Spacecraft_propulsion o Science o Exploration_of_Mars

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    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Samuel P. D. Birch, Gary Parker, Paul Corlies, Jason M. Soderblom,
    Julia
    W. Miller, Rose V. Palermo, Juan M. Lora, Andrew D. Ashton,
    Alexander G.

    Hayes, J. Taylor Perron. Reconstructing river flows remotely on
    Earth, Titan, and Mars. Proceedings of the National Academy of
    Sciences, 2023; 120 (29) DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2206837120 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230710180457.htm

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