Title: Dave Paige Francis Nimmo
1ESS 250 MARS
- Dave Paige / Francis Nimmo
2Student Topic Signup Today After Class, 4710
Geology
3Lecture Outline
- Introduction to Mars Atmosphere and Climate
- Atmospheres and Atmospheric Processes
- Key Properties of the Martian Atmosphere
- Key properties explained
- Obliquity and Obliquity History
- Surface and Atmospheric Temperatures
- Atmospheric Pressure
- Atmospheric Composition
- Climate History
- Interannual Variability
- Secular Variations
- Astronomically Driven Climate Change
- Long-Term Atmospheric Evolution
4Atmospheres Are Integral Parts of Planets
- Four basic types of planets
- Jovian Planets(no distinct surface, massive
hydrogen-rich atmospheres) Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus, Neptune - Terrestrial Planets (distinct solid rocky
surface, low mass oceans and atmospheres) Venus,
Earth, Mars - Icy Airfull Bodies (massive ice crusts with
significant atmospheres) Titan, Triton, Pluto,
Comets - Airless Bodies (small solid rocky or icy
surfaces, but negligible atmospheres)Mercury,
Moon, Asteroids, Small Moons - Atmospheric processes play important roles in the
evolution of all types of planets except airless
bodies
5Atmospheric Processes
- Atmospheres are the product of a number of
complex and interacting processes - Radiation (solar, infrared, orbit, spin axis)
- Chemistry (primordial composition, chemical
interactions and mass exchange with solid planet,
photochemistry) - Space Interactions (loss or gain of matter
through impact, escape) - Thermodynamics (redistribution of materials due
state changes, oceans, polar caps, condensate
clouds) - Dynamics (redistribution of materials due to
creation of kinetic energy by heat engine) - Biology (mass and energy cycling between
non-living and living) - Like their solid surfaces, the atmospheres of
Earth and Mars share many key characteristics
(except biology maybe)
6Martian Atmosphere Key Properties
- Mean Orbital Radius 1.5237 AU
- Orbital Period 687 Days
- Rotational Period 24.6 Days
- Surface Gravity 3.72 m/sec2
- Obliquity 25.19 deg
- Surface Temperature 148K-320K
- Surface Pressure 6 mbar
- Atmospheric Composition
- Carbon Dioxide (C02) 95.32 (variable)
- Nitrogen (N2) 2.7
- Argon (Ar) 1.6
- Oxygen (O2) 0.13
- Carbon Monoxide (CO) 0.07
- Water (H2O) 0.03 (variable)
- Neon (Ne) 0.00025
- Krypton (Kr) 0.00003
- Xenon (Xe) 0.000008
- Ozone (O3) 0.000003 (variable)
7Why These Key Properties?
- Mean Orbital Radius? History of solar system
formation (Bodes law) - Orbital Period 687 Days? A consequence of 1. With
Keplers 3d law P2 k r3 - Rotational Period 24.6 Days? History of late
giant impacts, no large moons to cause tidal
evolution - 4. Surface Gravity 3.72 m/sec2 ? Mass and Radius
of planet g G M / r2 - 5. Obliquity 25.19 deg? History of late giant
impacts (mean), Spin Orbit Resonance Coupling and
Chaotic Evolution (variability) - 6. Surface Temperature 148K-320K? Consequence of
1,2,3,5, surface thermal properties and
atmospheric radiative properties - 7. Surface Pressure 6 mbar? Consequence of 4,
atmospheric escape history, climate history and
carbonate formation, vapor pressure of permanent
CO2 polar cap? - 8. Atmospheric Composition? Consequence of 1-7,
plus much more
8Obliquity Evolution
- Mars undergoes large-scale obliquity variations
whereas Earth does not - A planets obliquity is forced by resonances
between the planets precessional period, and the
periods inclination variations of the other
planets. - Mars periods are in resonance whereas the
Earths are not. - An Earth without the Moon would also have periods
that would be in resonance - Mars obliquity has varies chaotically, making it
impossible to predict further and further back in
time
Question If Earths orbital variations caused
the Ice Ages, what have Mars orbital variations
caused?
9What Determines Surface Temperatures?
Global Radiation Balance
Infrared Radiation
Solar Radiation
Sun
Mars
Day
Night
R
Instantaneously, assuming no atmosphere or heat
conduction, unit emissivity
Local Solar-Zenith Angle
Insolation
Surface Solar Reflectivity (Albedo)
Solar Const. at 1 AU
Surface Temperature
Stefan-Boltzmann Constant
Sun-Mars Distance (AU)
10Current Distribution of Insolation
- Martian seasons are hemispherically asymmetric
due to eccentricity of orbit - Currently, perihelion passage occurs close to
southern summer solstice - Southern spring and summer are shorter, but more
intense than northern spring and summer - Situation will reverse in 26,000 years due to
precession of spin axis - Both poles receive exactly the same insolation,
regardless of orbital configuration because
orbital angular velocity increases with 1/ r2 as
insolation increases as 1/ r2
11Past Distribution of Insolation
- Low obliquity reduces insolation at poles (1/2
times current insolation) - High obliquity increases insolation at poles (2
times current insolation) - Annual average insolation at poles exceeds
insolation at the equator for obliquities of
greater than 50 degrees
12Current Martian Temperatures
- Latest MGS Thermal Emission Spectrometer (TES)
data - Current Mars Season is Ls336, Martian Southern
Summer - Ls is an angular measure of Martian Season, Ls0
at Northern Spring Equinox
- Mars thin atmosphere and no oceans results in
large daily temperature variations - Atmospheric temperatures are intermediate
between surface day and night temperatures - The radiative time constant for the Martian
atmosphere is 1 day, compared to weeks for the
Earths atmosphere and months for the Earths
ocean surface layer
13Mars Clouds and Thermal Structure
MGS MOC Global Cloud Map
Atmospheric Thermal Structure
- The Martian atmosphere is generally transparent
to solar radiation, but local and global dust
storms, and water ice clouds and hazes can
obscure the surface at visible wavelengths - Atmospheric dust absorbs solar radiation and
heats the atmosphere - Mars has no ozone layer (due mostly to lack of
atmospheric oxygen), and no warm stratosphere
like the Earth
14Infrared Radiation and Greenhouse Effect
Mariner 9 IRIS Spectra
- The surface and atmosphere of Mars emit
radiation to space at IR wavelengths (10-30
microns) - CO2 gas is the dominant absorber of IR radiation
when the atmosphere is clear - Dust and water ice clouds also absorb IR
radiation - The absorption of IR radiation by the atmosphere
results in a greenhouse effect, which elevates
surface temperatures - The Martian greenhouse effect is 5K, which is
small compared Earth (25K) and Venus (450K)
15Martian Surface Pressure
What is pressure? A force per unit area. How
does pressure relate to atmospheric
mass? Newtons Second Law F m a Divide this
by area P (mass per unit area) g This
makes sense atmospheric surface pressure is the
weight of the overlying atmospheric
column How does pressure relate to temperature
and density? Equation of State P r R T
(Ideal Gas Law) How does pressure vary with
altitude? dP - r g dz (Hydrostatic
Law) Combine this with Ideal Gas Law dP -
(P/RT) g dz After integrating P Po exp
-(z/(RT/g)) RT/g is the atmospheric scale height
(10 km)
16CO2 Phase Relationships
- It is sometimes useful to think of planetary
atmospheres as little sealed laboratory bottles
containing soil and volatiles (substances that
are liquids or gasses at room temperature and
pressure) that can be stirred, heated or cooled
etc. - Real planetary atmospheres are sealed by
gravity - The pressures and temperatures of multi-phase
systems in equilibrium follow phase relationships - At the Martian CO2 surface pressure of 6 mbar,
CO2 solid (ice) will form at T148K - What causes the surface pressure to be 6 mbar?
- In 1966, Leighton and Murray proposed that the 6
mbar Martian CO2 surface pressure was the
consequence of the presence of a permanent CO2
surface ice deposit at one of the Martian poles
17Seasonal CO2 Polar Caps
- At high latitudes during the cold fall and
winter seasons, CO2 condenses out of the
atmosphere to form surface deposits at T148K ,
which then sublimate back into the atmosphere
during spring and summer
Viking Lander 1 and 2 Pressure Data over 3 Mars
Years
Retreat of North Seasonal Polar Cap
- The condensation and sublimation of CO2 in both
hemispheres results in a 20 seasonal variation
in Martian surface pressure
18Permanent CO2 Polar Caps
- In Leighton and Murrays model, the total CO2
pressure in the atmosphere was the consequence of
the vapor pressures of permanent CO2 deposits at
the poles - Implication 1 Anything that changes the annual
average temperatures of permanent CO2 deposits
changes the equilibrium CO2 pressure locally in
the overlying atmosphere - Implication 2. Since atmospheric pressures
equalize over the entire planet, the mass of the
Martian atmosphere may undergo significant mass
variations with obliquity, as long as there is
sufficient CO2 in the cap-atmosphere system to
support a permanent CO2 deposit
19Residual Polar Caps
Small residual caps are exposed at both poles at
the end of the summer season after seasonal CO2
frost has completely evaporated
North Residual Cap (larger, centered)
South Residual Cap (smaller, off-center)
20Residual Cap Observations
Orbiter observations show that the north and
south residual polar caps have contrasting
properties
- Implications
- Theories predict only one permanent CO2 deposit
at any given time, since colder pole will rob
CO2 from the warmer pole over time - There may only be a very small amount of CO2
remaining on the south residual cap today its
importance as a significant source of atmospheric
CO2 at high obliquity is questionable..
- North Residual Cap
- Composed of Water Ice
- High Summer Temperature (200K)
- High water vapor abundance
- Sponge Texture
Close up MOC Images
- South Residual Cap
- Covered by incomplete layer of CO2 frost
- Low Temperature (148K)
- Low water vapor abundance
- Swiss Cheese Texture
21Martian Atmosphere Key Properties
V R I P
- Mean Orbital Radius 1.5237 AU V
- Orbital Period 687 Days V
- Rotational Period 24.6 Days V
- Surface Gravity 3.72 m/sec2 V
- Obliquity 25.19 deg V
- Surface Temperature 148K-320K V
- Surface Pressure 6 mbar V
- Atmospheric Composition
- Carbon Dioxide (C02) 95.32 (variable)
- Nitrogen (N2) 2.7
- Argon (Ar) 1.6
- Oxygen (O2) 0.13
- Carbon Monoxide (CO) 0.07
- Water (H2O) 0.03 (variable)
- Neon (Ne) 0.00025
- Krypton (Kr) 0.00003
- Xenon (Xe) 0.000008
- Ozone (O3) 0.000003 (variable)
22Nitrogen and Noble Gasses
- Nitrogen and noble gasses have high volatility
and low chemical interaction with solid planet - Tend to accumulate in atmosphere, and undergo
isotopic fractionation due to atmospheric escape
to space - Atmospheric Thermal Escape
½ m V2 G M m / r k T v sqrt(2 G
M / r) sqrt (2 k T / m )
Kinetic Energy
Gravitational Potential Energy
Low Mass Molecules Escape at Lower Temperatures
Thermal Energy
Escape Velocity
Independent Of Mass, Higher For More Massive
Planets
- Atmosphere becomes enriched in heavy isotopes
over time as lighter isotopes escape to space - Non-thermal escape processes also important for
Mars..
23Atmospheric Isotopic Ratios
- Measured by Viking Landers and in gas bubbles in
Mars meteorites - Atmospheric O formed phothemically by photolysis
of water vapor by solar UV photons
Assuming Earth and Mars started out with the same
isotopic composition, then
- Mars atmosphere enriched in heavy isotopes of N
and Xe relative to Earth, suggesting extensive
atmospheric escape - Mars atmosphere not enriched in heavy isotopes
of O, suggesting current atmosphere is in
isotopic equilibrium with a substantially larger
O reservoir (CO2 or H2O ices, or O in rocks)
24H20 Phase Relationships
- Water is less volatile than CO2
- Found in lower concentrations in the atmosphere
- Water vapor concentration is an exponential
function of temperature - Liquid water requires pressures of 6.1 mbar
- 6.1 mbar is close to the current mean Martian
surface pressure - Liquid water could be stable on Mars close to
the surface in the warmest regions during the
warmest times of the day
Current Range Of Martian Temperatures
25Atmospheric Water Observations
- Both Viking and MGS measured column abundance of
water vapor - Scale is in precipitable microns of water
- Typical values are 15 microns at low latitudes,
and up to 75 microns at the poles during summer
- Surface water vapor concentrations depend on how
the water is mixed vertically in the atmosphere,
but can never instantaneously exceed the frost
point temperature from the water phase diagram
26Frost Point Temperatures
- If atmospheric water is well mixed with the
atmosphere, we expect frost point temperatures of
195K to 210K on Mars
- Since observed surface and atmospheric
temperatures range from 148-300K, atmospheric and
surface water is expected to change phases often,
condensing during cold times of the day, and
colder seasons, and evaporating during warmer
times of the day or warmer seasons much like
on Earth
27Water Exchange
- The water we observe in the Martian atmosphere
represents a very small fraction of Mars
exchangeable water - We expect surface and subsurface reservoirs of
water any places that are in good contact with
the atmosphere where temperatures do not exceeded
the frost point for significant periods of time
Surface Frost At Viking Lander 2 Site (45 N)
Ground Ice (terrestrial example)
Residual Polar Caps
28Near-Surface Water Distribution
Mars Odyssey Gamma Ray Spectrometer (GRS) Neutron
Spectrometer map of hydrogen abundance in
uppermost meter.
- Models predict that ground ice will be stable
close to the surface at high latitudes where
annual maximum temperatures never exceed the
198K frost point - Source of GRS equatorial water not uniquely
determined (ice, hydrated minerals, etc)
29Carbonates (H20, CO2 and Rocks)
- Carbonates are chemical weathering products of
volcanic rocks - Carbonate form at low temperatures in aqueous
environments - Carbonates decompose at high temperatures
- Urey Reaction
MgCaSi2O6 2CO2 2H2O MgCO3 CaCO3 2SiO2
2H2O
Pyroxene (basalt)
Carbonic Acid
Carbonates
Quartz
Hot Cold
(reconstitution) (weathering)
- Ideas
- Early climate of Mars was warm and wet, but net
carbonate formation decreased atmospheric CO2
over time, resulting in todays cold climate - Present 6.1 mbar atmospheric pressure is no
coincidence, regulated by formation of carbonates
in ephemeral liquid water environments - Question Where are all the carbonates?
- Answer Limited spectroscopic evidence for
carbonates on surface, and some Mars meteorites
are 1 carbonate
30Climate and Climate Change
- Changes in observable properties and behavior of
atmosphere occur on many time scales - Weather (days to weeks, variations about a mean
state) - Seasons (months, forced by seasonal insloation
variations) - Interannual Variability (2-100 year variations
about a mean state) - Secular Variability (2-10000 year variations,
not about a mean state global change) - Orbital and Axial (10,000 10 million year,
variations about a mean state forced by
insolation variations) - Long-Term (10 million 10 billion year
variations, atmospheric and planetary evolution) - Climate is usually defined to include variations
at 2 year timescales - We have fragmentary evidence for Martian
variability on all these timescales
31Weather and Interannual Variations
Viking Lander Pressure
Telescopic Dust Storm Observations
- Weather variations at high latitudes can be
large during fall and winter due to the passage
of frontal systems - Interannual variations in most aspects
atmospheric parameters are small - The occurrence and intensity of global dust
storms varies from year to year
32Secular Climate Variations and Global Change
- High-resolution MOC images of the morphology of
CO2 deposits on the south residual polar cap
taken exactly one Mars year apart show
significant interannual variations - If the changes are interpreted as mass loss to
the atmosphere, the atmospheric mass could double
over the course of 100 years! - There is no guarantee that the current
configuration of Mars polar caps and subsurface
ice deposits are in perfect equilibrium with the
current climate
33Astronomically-Driven Climate Change
- Extensive layered deposits have been observed
within both residual polar caps, and in
mid-latitude craters - Sedimentary layering is associated with changing
depositional environments - The ages and timescales associated with these
layers are not known - If the layers are due to astronomical climate
forcing, then the exposed sections we can observe
may represent incomplete records of climate
variability..
North Polar Layered Deposits
Layered Deposits in Mid-latitude Crater
34Long Term Climate Change and Atmospheric Evolution
- The notion that early Mars was warm and wet and
is now cold and dry was first popularized by
Lowell at the turn of the 20th century - This is an attractive hypothesis that has
consciously or unconsciously influenced much of
our thinking regarding Mars climate and biology - Models show us that changing the global climate
of Mars probably requires more than changes in
the distribution of solar energy due to
astronomical forcing, and that changes in
atmospheric composition to give atmospheric CO2
pressures of 1 atm are required to enable the
stability of liquid water - Unfortunately, most of the evidence cited for
long-term climate change on Mars (minerals,
runoff channels, outflow channels, layers,
gullies etc.) can also be attributed to more
local, short-lived processes that do not
necessarily require a warmer global climate