Title: Lecture 16: The Climate of Early Mars
1Lecture 16 The Climate of Early Mars
Meteo 466
2MER Rovers
- Two rovers Spirit and Opportunity
- Arrived at Mars in early 2004
- Still operating!
- Design lifetime was for 3-6 months
Courtesy of Joy Crisp
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4Endurance crater (Opportunity)
Courtesy of Darren Williams
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7Blueberries
From Opportunity rover at Meridiani Planum
8Spherules (Blueberries) on Mars
(False color image)
9Opportunity roverMeridiani Planum
- Lots of hematite, in the form of blueberries
- Also see evidence for sulfate evaporites
- Both are evidence for standing water
- Doesnt tell you much about surface temperature,
though, because sulfate solutions have low
freezing points
Courtesy of NASA
10Sulfuric Acid as Anti-Freeze
Courtesy of Andy Knoll
11- Blueberries are made of hematite (Fe2O3)
- Liquid water is required for their formation
12Crossbedding?
- Standing liquid water (no ice cover) is probably
- required to form these patterns (John
Grotzinger, MIT)
13- The evidence for liquid water on Mars surface is
not new, however. It goes back to Mariner 9
(1971) and then Viking (1976) ?
14Martian Outflow Channel (Viking)
200 km
From J. K. Beatty et al., The New Solar System,
4th ed
15200 km
Ares Vallis (from Viking)
From J. K. Beatty et al., The New Solar System,
4th ed.
16200 km
Nirgal Vallis (Viking)
From J. K. Beatty et al., The New Solar System,
4th ed.
17200 km
Warrego Vallis (Viking)
From J. K. Beatty et al.,The New Solar System,
4th ed
18River channel
Nanedi Vallis (from Mars Global Surveyor)
- Grand Canyon required several millions
- of years to form
- The same should be true for Nanedi Vallis
- The water that cut this valley was probably
- fresh, like Colorado river water
3 km
19Evidence for Persistent Flow
Malin and Edgett, Science, 2003
20Fan in Holden NE Crater (MOC image)
- Cutoff channel meander
- Cross-cutting channels
- (inverted relief in both cases)
Malin and Edgett, Science, 2003
21How warm did early Mars need to be to produce the
observed fluvial features?
- Outflow channels caused by catastrophic floods ?
no obvious limit on surface temperature, but lots
of water! - Other valleys (Warrego, Nirgal, Nanedi) and
features such as alluvial fans require a
long-lived hydrologic cycle - Answer depends partly on how much water was
present water-rich planets (like Earth) have
bi-stable surface temperatures
22Present Earth (Ts 15oC)
Snowball Earth (Ts -50oC)
Caldeira and Kasting, Nature (1992)
23- Conclusion
- A water-rich planet (like Earth) must have a mean
surface temperature near or above the freezing
point in order to have an active hydrologic cycle - A planet with much less water (early Mars?) might
be able to maintain an active hydrologic cycle at
lower temperatures because ice-albedo feedback
would be less powerful
24Old theory for warming early Mars(Pollack et
al., Icarus, 1987)
- Do it with a dense CO2 atmosphere
- Volcanism and impacts should have generated lots
of CO2 - CO2 removal rate would have been slow as long as
surface temperatures were below freezing
25The Carbonate-Silicate Cycle
(metamorphism)
26However, the Pollack et al. calculations (which
Were done by me as a postdoc) neglected CO2
condensation. This changes the picture
27Mars T profiles (Present solar luminosity)
CO2 condensation region
Ref. J. F. Kasting, Icarus (1991)
28- Can still get the mean surface temperature above
freezing today with CO2 - but
- Solar luminosity was 25-30 lower prior to 3.8
Ga, when most of the valleys are thought to have
formed - ? causes problems
29J. F. Kasting, Icarus (1991)
30Mars Flux calculations at Ts 273 K
A 1- 4 FS/S0
SEFF FIR/FS
J.F. Kasting, Icarus (1991)
31- A gaseous CO2/H2O atmosphere cannot have warmed
early Mars above freezing (global average)
because - Condensation of CO2 reduces the tropospheric
lapse rate, thereby lowering the greenhouse
effect - CO2 is a good Rayleigh scatterer (2.5 times
better than air) ? increase in albedo outweighs
the increase in the greenhouse effect - There is also a problem with carbonates where
are they?
32Other ideas for keeping early Mars warm
- Scattering greenhouse effect of CO2 clouds (F.
Forget and R. Pierrehumbert, Science, 1997)
3315 ?m
CO2 optical properties in the thermal IR
CO2 ice cloud (?ext 10)
E
R
T
Reflectivity
Transmissivity
Emissivity
Ref. Forget and Pierrehumbert, Science (1997)
34Scattering greenhouse effect
- CO2 ice crystals are expected to be 10-50 ?m in
size, comparable to thermal-IR wavelengths - Outgoing thermal-IR radiation is therefore
backscattered more effectively than incoming
(visible/near-IR) solar radiation - ? surface warms
35MARS 2-bar CO2 atmosphere S/S0 0.75
100 fractional cloud cover
Wet
Wet
Dry
Ref. Forget and Pierrehumbert, Science (1997)
36- Problems with the scattering greenhouse
hypothesis - Need near 100 cloud cover
- Low (or thick) clouds can cool, as they do on
Earth (Mischna et al., Icarus, 2000) - CO2 clouds create localized heating which, in
turn, makes them disappear (T. Colaprete et al.,
JGR, 2003) - Other possible solutions
- A CH4 greenhouse? An SO2 greenhouse? (Halevy et
al., Science, 2007)
37- The idea that Mars early atmosphere may have
contained CH4 is strengthened by (putative)
measurements of CH4 in Mars present atmosphere
38Is there CH4 in Mars present atmosphere?
M. Mumma, DPS mtg., Fall 03
39Methane on Mars?(From Mars Express Planetary
Fourier Spectrometer)
0 ppbv CH4
10-50 ppbv CH4
H2O
H2O
H2O
CH4 (3018 cm-1)
Solar
Formisano et al., Science Express (28 Oct., 2004)
40CH4 Spatial Variability
High CH4
Med CH4
Low CH4
Formisano et al., Science Express (28 Oct., 2004)
41Conclusions
- Early Mars (gt 3.8 Ga) was probably warm, i.e.,
its surface temperature was near or above the
freezing point of (nearly pure) water - Higher CO2 levels were probably part of the
story. CH4 may also have helped to warm the
planet. The story makes more sense if early Mars
was inhabited - Sending an orbiter to Mars to look for CH4 and
study the upper atmosphere and its interaction
with the solar wind is a good idea!