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1.
The mid- and high-latitudes of Mars are covered by a smooth young mantle that is interpreted as an atmospherically derived air-fall deposit of ice and dust related to recent climate changes. In order to determine relative and absolute ages of this surface unit within the southern hemisphere, a systematic survey of all available HiRISE and CTX images in the Malea Planum region from 55–60°S latitude and 50–70°E longitude was performed and the distribution and the morphology of small impact craters on the mantle deposit were investigated. Using crater size-frequency measurements, we derived absolute model ages of ~3–5 Ma for the surface of the mantle, immediately south of the Hellas basin rim. Morphologic observations of the mantle, its fresh appearance, very low number of craters, and superposition on older units support this very young Amazonian age. Nearly all observed craters on the smooth mantle in Malea Planum are small and show signs of erosion, evidence for the ongoing modification of the ice–dust mantle. However, this modification has not been strong enough to reset the surface age. Compared to the ice–dust mantle at higher latitudes in the northern and southern hemisphere, the surface of the mantle in Malea Planum is older and thus has been relatively stable during obliquity changes in the last ~3–5 Ma. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the ice–dust mantle is a complex surface deposit of different layers, that shows a strong latitude dependence in morphology and has been deposited and degraded at different times in martian history.  相似文献   

2.
The martian polar regions have layered deposits of ice and dust. The stratigraphy of these deposits is exposed within scarps and trough walls and is thought to have formed due to climate variations in the past. Insolation has varied significantly over time and caused dramatic changes in climate, but it has remained unclear whether insolation variations could be linked to the stratigraphic record. We present a model of layer formation based on physical processes that expresses polar deposition rates of ice and dust in terms of insolation. In this model, layer formation is controlled by the insolation record, and dust-rich layers form by two mechanisms: (1) increased summer sublimation during high obliquity, and (2) variations in the polar deposition of dust modulated by obliquity variations. The model is simple, yet physically plausible, and allows for investigations of the climate control of the polar layered deposits (PLD). We compare the model to a stratigraphic column obtained from the north polar layered deposits (NPLD) (Fishbaugh, K.E., Hvidberg, C.S., Byrne, S., Russel, P.S., Herkenhoff, K.E., Winstrup, M., Kirk, R. [2010a]. Geophys. Res. Lett., 37, L07201) and show that the model can be tuned to reproduce complex layer sequences. The comparison with observations cannot uniquely constrain the PLD chronology, and it is limited by our interpretation of the observed stratigraphic column as a proxy for NPLD composition. We identified, however, a set of parameters that provides a chronology of the NPLD tied to the insolation record and consistently explains layer formation in accordance with observations of NPLD stratigraphy. This model dates the top 500 m of the NPLD back to ~1 million years with an average net deposition rate of ice and dust of 0.55 mm a?1. The model stratigraphy contains a quasi-periodic ~30 m cycle, similar to a previously suggested cycle in brightness profiles from the NPLD (Laskar, J., Levrard, B., Mustard, F. [2002]. Nature, 419, 375–377; Milkovich, S., Head, J.W. [2005]. J. Geophys. Res. 110), but here related to half of the obliquity cycles of 120 and 99 kyr and resulting from a combination of the two layer formation mechanisms. Further investigations of the non-linear insolation control of PLD formation should consider data from other geographical locations and include radar data and other stratigraphic datasets that can constrain the composition and stratigraphy of the NPLD layers.  相似文献   

3.
A fully 3-dimensional implicit numerical model for comet nucleus evolution is presented, emphasizing dust mantle formation. A spherical configuration is considered with an initial composition of amorphous H2O ice and dust, taking into account a discrete dust-grain size distribution. The model is applied to Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, adopting its orbital elements, rotation period and rotation axis inclination. We find that the dust mantle thickness varies over the surface from 1 cm to about 10 cm (thus lower and higher than the diurnal skin-depth, respectively). The size distribution of ejected grains varies along the orbit and is steeper than the initial one adopted for the nucleus. The crystallization front advances inward in spurts, and its depth varies between 1 and several meters. We test the effect of the thermal conductivity on the surface temperature distribution and depths of the dust mantle and crystallization front.  相似文献   

4.
The relative importance of surface mass fluxes and ice flow in shaping the north polar layered deposits (NPLD), now or in the past, remains a fundamental and open question. Motivated by observation of an apparent ice divide on Gemina Lingula (also known as Titania Lobe), we propose a two-stage evolution leading to the present-day topography on that lobe of the NPLD. Ice flow approximately balances surface mass fluxes in the first stage, but in the second stage ice flow has minimal influence and topography is modified predominantly by the formation of troughs. We focus here on evidence for the first stage, by testing the fit of topography between troughs to an ice-flow model. We find that independent model fits on distinct flow paths closely match inter-trough topography, uniformly over a broad region on Gemina Lingula, with mutually consistent and physically reasonable fitting parameters. However, our model requires ice to occupy and flow in spaces where troughs currently incise the ice. We therefore infer that the troughs (and the distribution of mass balance that caused them) post-date deposition of the inter-trough material and its modification by flow. Because trough formation has apparently altered inter-trough topography very little, we infer that trough formation must have been rapid in comparison to the (still unknown) time-scale of flow since troughs began to form. We view the evidence for past flow as strong, but we do not think that topographic evidence alone can be conclusive. Observations of englacial stratigraphy using orbital sounding radars will yield conclusive tests of our inferred mechanism for the formation of inter-trough topography.  相似文献   

5.
Alan D. Howard 《Icarus》1978,34(3):581-599
The circumpolar stepped topography observed within the Martian polar regions can have originated from one of a limited number of processes, including (i) erosion of resistant layers, (ii) erosion rates inversely proportional to slope gradient, (iii) basal sapping, and (iv) bistable rates of erosion and deposition. The last mechanism appears most likely to operate on the polar escarpments, driven by ablation of volatiles on the dark scarps and deposition on the icy flats. Decreasing albedo and a corresponding increase in radiation input caused by dust accumulations on the ablating layered deposits on steeper slopes provides a metastable erosion rate model sufficient to produce a stepped topography. Wind erosion is presuured later to remove the loose excess residual dust which accumulated during ablation of the scarps. The ablation of the scarps contemporaneously with ice accumulation on the flats implies the layered deposits exposed on the scarps have formed beneath overlying flats, and the observed unconformities within these deposits can due to the exposure of deposits laid down under more than one flat with different gradients. The linearity and mutual parallelism of the scarps is a result of scarp retreat on a regional slope or with a prefered direction of scarf retreat. The spiral arrangement of the scarps is probably due to more rapid retreat of scarps facing slightly west of the equatorward meridian, that is, in the direction of greatest solar and atmospheric warming. The model suggest, but does not prove, that the layered deposits are mostly water ice, with small amounts of codeposited silicate dust and volcanic ash.  相似文献   

6.
An extensive layered formation covers the high plateaus around Valles Marineris. Mapping based on HiRISE, CTX and HRSC images reveals these layered deposits (LDs) crop out north of Tithonium Chasma, south of Ius Chasma, around West Candor Chasma, and southwest of Juventae Chasma and Ganges Chasma. The estimated area covered by LDs is ∼42,300 km2. They consist of a series of alternating light and dark beds, a 100 m in total thickness that is covered by a dark unconsolidated mantle possibly resulting from their erosion. Their stratigraphic relationships with the plateaus and the Valles Marineris chasmata indicate that the LDs were deposited during the Early- to Late Hesperian, and possibly later depending on the region, before the end of the backwasting of the walls near Juventae Chasma, and probably before Louros Valles sapping near Ius Chasma. Their large spatial coverage and their location mainly on highly elevated plateaus lead us to conclude that LDs correspond to airfall dust and/or volcanic ash. The surface of LDs is characterized by various morphological features, including lobate ejecta and pedestal craters, polygonal fractures, valleys and sinuous ridges, and a pitted surface, which are all consistent with liquid water and/or water ice filling the pores of LDs. LDs were episodically eroded by fluvial processes and were possibly modified by sublimation processes. Considering that LDs correspond to dust and/or ash possibly mixed with ice particles in the past, LDs may be compared to Dissected Mantle Terrains currently observed in mid- to high latitudes on Mars, which correspond to a mantle of mixed dust and ice that is partially or totally dissected by sublimation. The analysis of CRISM and OMEGA hyperspectral data indicates that the basal layer of LDs near Ganges Chasma exhibits spectra with absorption bands at ∼1.4 μm, and ∼1.9 μm and a large deep band between ∼2.21 and ∼2.26 μm that are consistent with previous spectral analysis in other regions of LDs. We interpret these spectral characteristics as an enrichment of LDs in opaline silica or by Al-phyllosilicate-rich layers being overlain by hydroxylated ferric sulfate-rich layers. These alteration minerals are consistent with the aqueous alteration of LDs at low temperatures.  相似文献   

7.
《Icarus》1987,70(3):409-441
Thick sequences of layered deposits are found in the Martian Valles Marineris. They exhibit fine, nearly horizontal layering, and are present as isolated plateaus of what may have once been more extensive deposits. Individual sequences of layered deposits are as thick as 5 km. The greatest total thicknesses of deposits are found in Candor, Ophir, and Melas chasmata. individual layer thicknesses range from about 70 to 300 m. Some tilting of sequences is observed, but at the best image resolutions, no angular unconformities are detectable in the layers. The sequences of events in the canyons, as deduced from morphologic and stratigraphic evidence, was (1) graben formation in response to the tharsis uplift, (2) canyon wall retreat and canyon enlargement, roughly contemporaneous with formation of the layered deposits, (3) deep erosion of the layered deposits, (4) landsliding of the canyon walls, and (5) eolian erosion of the layered deposits, perhaps continuing up to the present. We consider four hypotheses for the origin of the layered deposits: they are eolian deposits, they are remnants of the material that makes up the canyon walls, they are deposits of explosive volcanic eruptions, or they were deposited in standing bodies of water. The rhythmic nature of the layers and their lateral continuity, horizontality, great thickness, and stratigraphic relationships with other units in the canyons all appear most consistent with deposition in an aqueous environment. If standing bodies of water existed in the Valles Marineris, they were almost certainly ice-covered. there are three ways in which sediment could have entered an ice-covered lake: down through the ice cover, up from the lake bottom, or in from the lake margins. Layers of sediment could have been transported downward through an ice cover by foundering or Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities, but it is not clear whether there was a viable mechanism for repeatedly accumulating thick sediment layers on top of the ice cover. Subaqueous volcanic eruption on the lake bottom does not suffer from many of the morphologic arguments that make origin by subaerial volcanism seem improbable. While this mechanism is attractive, there are no eruptive centers observed and there is no other direct evidence to support it. Because canyon enlargement took place at roughly the same time as layer deposition, debris from the canyon walls is an obvious and likely source for some of the material in the layered deposits; however, the volume of material removed from the canyon walls may be insufficient to account for all of the presently observed material. We conclude that there are several geologically feasible, but as yet unproven, mechanisms that could have led to formation of thick deposits in ice-covered paleolakes in the Valles Marineris. Present data are insufficient to choose conclusively among the various possibilities. Several types of data from the Mars Observer mission will be useful in further characterizing the deposits and clarifying the process of their origin. The deposits should be considered important targets for a future Mars sample return mission.  相似文献   

8.
Ice deposits of the permanent northern polar cap of Mars exhibit a clearly expressed layered structure connected with consecutive accumulation of a solid phase of H2O (ice) with different impurity fractions of dust. The observed structure of the northern polar cap deposits is direct evidence of the uneven accumulation of ice associated with climate variations on Mars over a long period of time. Outside the boundaries of the present northern polar cap, there are isolated remnant massifs of bright deposits with a clearly distinguishable layered structure. In this paper, we analyze the morphology, spatial distribution, and material composition of remnant massifs within the latitude belt of 60°–85°. The similarity in the structure and material composition found in the remnant massifs and the layered deposits of the northern polar cap of Mars apparently suggests that these formations were genetically connected in the past climatic epochs.  相似文献   

9.
A model of cometary activity is developed which integrates the feedback processes involving heat, gas, and dust transport, and dust mantle development. The model includes the effects of latitude, rotation, and spin axis orientation. Results are obtained for various grain size distributions, dust-to-ice ratios, and spin axis orientations. Attention is focused on the development, change of structure and distribution of dust mantles and their mutual interaction with ice surface temperature and gas and dust production. In this model the dust mantle controls the mechanism of gas transport not onlu by its effect on the temperature but, more importantly, by its own dynamic stability. Results suggest that an initially homogeneous short-period comet with a “cosmic” dust-to-water ice ratio, typical orbit, rotation rate, and grain size distribution would develop at most only a thin (<1 mm) cyclic mantle at all points on the nucleus. Such a fully developed temporary mantle would exist throughout the diurnal cycle only beyond ~4AU. Thus, cyclic behavior would be expected for such an idealized comet, at least for most of its lifetime. Long-term irreversible mantle development on comets with typical rotation rates was not found except regionally on Encke and also on objects with perihelia ?1.5 AU. Even in these cases, free silicate exists, after a few cycles, only as relatively rare large grains and agglomerates with radii ~1 cm scattered over exposed ice. Full mantle development would require hundreds to thousands of cycles. In the case of an initially homogeneous comet Encke, this slow incipient mantle development is shown to be the direct result of its peculiar axial orientation. High obliquity appears required for long-term mantle development for typical rotation rates and perihelia ?1.5 AU. Heat conduction into the nucleus for an incompletely mantled or bald comet has been found to be very important in maintaining relatively higher ice surface temperatures, and hence fluxes, during those portions of the diurnal and orbital cycles which would otherwise be cooler. It is also shown to be at least one cause of post perihelion brightness asymmetries, especially in lower obliquity comets. Maximum heliocentric distances at which 1-μm dust, sand, pebbles, cobbles, and boulders can be permanently ejected from the subsolar point by H2O (CO2) are (in AU): 6.9 (16.8), 5.2 (11.5), 1.8 (3.0), 0.21 (0.34) and 0.07 (0.11), respectively. A detailed anatomy of temperature, gas and dust fluxes vs latitude and longitude for a homogeneous rotating comet with fixed axis is given for comparison with future observations. Most H2O flux histories deduced from brightness data are found to be in reasonable agreement with the model, allowing for uncertainty in radius and albedo. A clear exception is Encke. It is shown that the large discrepancy between Encke's observed and model predicted fluxes, based on radar cross section, can be used to evaluate the extent of exposed ice (<10%). The model is then used to place an active area so as to explain a reported sharp drop in flux on approach to the Sun at 0.78 AU. An active area or areas, <10% of the comet's surface, centered near 65°N latitude appears indicated. Although cyclic mantles are generally indicated for the set of parameters we used, our results show that a global mantle only 1 to 3 cm thick (depending on the orbit) consisting of a full range of grain sizes can cause irresversible evolution to a noncometary body. We investigated the long-term evolution of such a postulated initially thinly mantled cometary object. It was found that after the first few passes and until the end of its dynamic lifetime the object averaged <3 × 10?12 g cm?1 sec?1 H2O flux. Therefore, if cometary objects evolve into Apollo asteroids, ice should always be accessible within 10 m of the surface despite numerous close perihelion passages. The possible impact of factors not included in the model, such as initial inhomogeneities, coma scattering of radiation, and global redistribution of ejected silicate around the nucleus, are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
We present thermal evolution calculations of inhomogeneous asymmetric initial configurations of a spherical model of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, using a fully 3-dimensional numerical code. The initial composition is amorphous H2O ice and dust, in a “layered-pile” configuration, where layers differing in ice/dust ratio and thermal properties extend over a fraction of the surface area and about 10 m in depth and may overlap. We analyze the effect of one such layer, as well as the combined effect of many layers, randomly distributed. We find that internal inhomogeneities affect both the surface temperature and the activity pattern of the comet. In particular, they may lead to outbursts at large heliocentric distances and also to activity on the night-side of the nucleus. The rates of ablation and depths of dust mantle and crystalline ice outer layer as functions of longitude and latitude are shown to be affected as well.  相似文献   

11.
The south residual polar cap of Mars, rich in CO2 ice, is compositionally distinct from the north residual cap which is dominantly H2O ice. The south cap is also morphologically distinct, displaying a bewildering variety of depressions formed in thin layered deposits, which have been observed to change by scarp retreat over an interval of one Mars year (Malin et al., 2001, Science 294, 2146-2148). The climatically sensitive locale of the residual caps suggests that their behavior may help in the interpretation of recent fluctuations or repeatability of the Mars climate. We have used Mars Global Surveyor Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) images obtained in three southern summers to map the variety of features in the south residual cap and to evaluate changes over two Mars years (Mars y). The images show that there are two distinct layered units which were deposited at different times separated by a period of degradation. The older unit, ∼10 m thick, has layers approximately 2 m thick. The younger unit has variable numbers of layers, each ∼1 m thick. The older unit is eroding by scarp retreat averaging 3.6 m/Mars y, a rate greater than the retreat of 2.2 m/Mars y observed for the younger unit. The rates of scarp retreat and sizes of the different types of depressions indicate that the history of the residual cap has been short periods of deposition interspersed with longer erosional periods. Erosion of the older unit probably occupied ∼100-150 Mars y. One layer may have been deposited after the Mariner 9 observations in 1972. Residual cap layers appear to differ from normal annual winter deposits by having a higher albedo and perhaps by having higher porosities. These properties might be produced by differences in the depositional meteorology that affect the fraction of high porosity snow included in the winter deposition.  相似文献   

12.
It is uncertain whether the residual (perennial) south polar cap on Mars is a transitory or a permanent feature in the current Martian climate. While there is no firm evidence for complete disappearance of the cap in the past, clearly observable changes have been documented. Observations suggest that the perennial cap lost more CO2 material in the spring/summer season prior to the Mariner 9 mission than in those same seasons monitored by Viking and Mars Global Surveyor. In this paper we examine one process that may contribute to these changes—the radiative effects of a planet encircling dust storm that starts during late Martian southern spring on the stability of the perennial south polar cap. To approach this, we model the radiative transfer through a dusty planetary atmosphere bounded by a sublimating CO2 surface.A critical parameter for this modeling is the surface albedo spectrum from the near-UV to the thermal-IR, which was determined from both space-craft and Earth-based observations covering multiple wavelength regimes. Such a multi-wavelength approach is highly desirable since one spectral band by itself cannot tightly constrain the three-parameter space for polar surface albedo models, namely photon “scattering length” in the CO2 ice and the amounts of intermixed water and dust.Our results suggest that a planet-encircling dust storm with onset near solstice can affect the perennial cap's stability, leading to advanced sublimation in a “dusty” year. Since the total amount of solid CO2 removed by a single storm may be less than the total CO2 thickness, a series of dust storms would be required to remove the entire residual CO2 ice layer from the south perennial cap.  相似文献   

13.
The Mars Atmosphere-Ice Coupler MAIC-2 is a simple, latitudinal model, which consists of a set of parameterisations for the surface temperature, the atmospheric water transport and the surface mass balance (condensation minus evaporation) of water ice. It is driven directly by the orbital parameters obliquity, eccentricity and solar longitude (Ls) of perihelion. Surface temperature is described by the Local Insolation Temperature (LIT) scheme, which uses a daily and latitude-dependent radiation balance. The evaporation rate of water is calculated by an expression for free convection, driven by density differences between water vapor and ambient air, the condensation rate follows from the assumption that any water vapour which exceeds the local saturation pressure condenses instantly, and atmospheric transport of water vapour is approximated by instantaneous mixing. Glacial flow of ice deposits is neglected. Simulations with constant orbital parameters show that low obliquities favour deposition of ice in high latitudes and vice versa. A transient scenario driven by a computed history of orbital parameters over the last 10 million years produces essentially monotonically growing polar ice deposits during the most recent 4 million years, and a very good agreement with the observed present-day polar layered deposits. The thick polar deposits sometimes continue in thin ice deposits which extend far into the mid latitudes, which confirms the idea of “ice ages” at high obliquity.  相似文献   

14.
We used MGS-MOC and MRO-MARCI daily mapping images of the North Polar Region of Mars from 16 August 2005 (Ls = 270°) to 21 May 2009 (Ls = 270°), covering portions of three consecutive martian years (MY 27-MY 29), to observe the seasonal behavior of the polar ice cap and atmospheric phenomena. The rate of cap regression was similar in MY 28 and MY 29, but was advanced by 3.5° of Ls (∼7-8 sols) in MY 29. The spatial and temporal behaviors of dust and condensate clouds were similar in the two years and generally in accord with prior years. Dust storms (>100 km2) were observed in all seasons, with peak activity occurring at Ls = 10-20° from 50°N to 70°N and at Ls = 135-140° from 70°N to 90°N. The most active quadrant was 0-90°W in MY 28, shifting to 180-270°W in MY 29. The majority of regional storms in both years developed in longitudes from 10°W to 60°W. During late summer the larger storms obscure the North Polar Region in a cloud of dust that transitions to north polar hood condensate clouds around autumnal equinox.Changes in the distribution of perennial ice deposits, especially in Olympia Planum, were observed between the 2 years, with the MY 29 ice distribution being the most extensive observed to date. Modeling suggests that the small, bright ice patches on the residual cap are not the result of slope or elevation effects. Rather we suggest that they are the result of local meteorological effects on ice deposition. The annual darkening and brightening of peripheral areas of the residual cap around summer solstice can be explained by the sublimation of a brighter frost layer revealing an underlying darker, ice rich layer that itself either sublimes to reveal brighter material below or acts as a cold trap, attracting condensation of water vapor that brightens the surface. An alternative explanation invokes transport and deposition of dust on the surface from the cap interior, and later removal of that dust. The decrease in cap albedo and accompanying increase in near surface atmospheric stability may be related to the annual minimum of polar storm activity near northern summer solstice.  相似文献   

15.
The Amazonian period of Mars has been described as static, cold, and dry. Recent analysis of high-resolution imagery of equatorial and mid-latitude regions has revealed an array of young landforms produced in association with ice and liquid water; because near-surface ice in these regions is currently unstable, these ice-and-water-related landforms suggest one or more episodes of martian climate change during the Amazonian. Here we report on the origin and evolution of valley systems within a degraded crater in Noachis Terra, Asimov Crater. The valleys have produced a unique environment in which to study the geomorphic signals of Amazonian climate change. New high-resolution images reveal Hesperian-aged layered basalt with distinctive columnar jointing capping interior crater fill and providing debris, via mass wasting, for the surrounding annular valleys. The occurrence of steep slopes (>20°), relatively narrow (sheltered) valleys, and a source of debris have provided favorable conditions for the preservation of shallow-ice deposits. Detailed mapping reveals morphological evidence for viscous ice flow, in the form of several lobate debris tongues (LDT). Superimposed on LDT are a series of fresh-appearing gullies, with typical alcove, channel, and fan morphologies. The shift from ice-rich viscous-flow formation to gully erosion is best explained as a shift in martian climate, from one compatible with excess snowfall and flow of ice-rich deposits, to one consistent with minor snow and gully formation. Available dating suggests that the climate transition occurred >8 Ma, prior to the formation of other small-scale ice-rich flow features identified elsewhere on Mars that have been interpreted to have formed during the most recent phases of high obliquity. Taken together, these older deposits suggest that multiple climatic shifts have occurred over the last tens of millions of years of martian history.  相似文献   

16.
Mark A. Wieczorek 《Icarus》2008,196(2):506-517
The polar caps of Mars have long been acknowledged to be composed of unknown proportions of water ice, solid CO2 (dry ice), and dust. Gravity and topography data are here analyzed over the southern cap to place constraints on its density, and hence composition. Using a localized spectral analysis combined with a lithospheric flexure model of ice cap loading, the best fit density of the volatile-rich south polar layered deposits is found to be 1271 kg m−3 with 1-σ limits of 1166 and 1391 kg m−3. The best fit elastic thickness of this geologically young deposit is 140 km, though any value greater than 102 km can fit the observations. The best fit density implies that about 55% dry ice by volume could be sequestered in these deposits if they were completely dust free. Alternatively, if these deposits were completely free of solid CO2, the dust content would be constrained to lie between about 14 and 28% by volume. The bulk thermal conductivity of the polar cap is not significantly affected by these maximum allowable concentrations of dust. However, even if a moderate quantity of solid CO2 were present as horizontal layers, the bulk thermal conductivity of the polar cap would be significantly reduced. Reasonable estimates of the present day heat flow of Mars predict that dry ice beneath the thicker portions of the south polar cap would have melted. Depending on the quantity of solid CO2 in these deposits today, it is even possible that water ice could melt where the cap is thickest. If independent estimates for either the dust or CO2 content of the south polar cap could be obtained, and if radar sounding data could determine whether this polar cap is presently experiencing basal melting or not, it would be possible to use these observations to place tight constraints on the present day heat flow of Mars.  相似文献   

17.
The evolution of a submarine fan, the Bear Island Trough Mouth Fan, is outlined using high-resolution seismic data. Eight seismic units are identified. The identified units comprise sediments of Middle and Late Pleistocene age. They were probably deposited during eight glacial advances of the Barents Sea Ice Sheet to the shelf break. The units are dominated by a chaotic seismic signature on the upper fan and a mounded seismic facies further downslope. The mounded signature is inferred to reflect large submarine debris flow deposits, probably generated by oversteepening of the upper slope. Unlike many other passive margin fans, glacigenic sediments derived from an ice sheet at the shelf break were the primary sediment input. During interstadials and interglacials the sedimentation rate was reduced markedly. Three large sliding events also influenced the Middle and Late Pleistocene fan growth.  相似文献   

18.
M. Podolak  G. Herman 《Icarus》1985,61(2):267-277
The insulating effect of an evolving dust mantle is examined. The role of this mantle in determining the surface temperature of the ice core is studied as a function of the mass fraction of the dust in the ice-dust mixture and the thermal conductivity of the nucleus. Using the so-called “looselattice” model of D.A. Mendis and G.D. Brin (1977, Moon17, 359–372) (which was also extended to include cracks and pores in the mantle), it was found that both high dust to ice ratios and high core conductivities inhibit mantle blowoff. Indeed, it is often possible to build an essentially permanent dust mantle around an ice nucleus, so that the nucleus will take on an asteroidal appearance.  相似文献   

19.
It has been suggested that inclusions of CO2 or CO2 clathrate hydrates may comprise a portion of the polar deposits on Mars. Here we present results from an experimental study in which CO2 molecules were trapped in water ice deposited from CO2/H2O atmospheres at temperatures relevant for the polar regions of Mars. Fourier-Transform Infrared spectroscopy was used to monitor the phase of the condensed ice, and temperature programmed desorption was used to quantify the ratio of species in the generated ice films. Our results show that when H2O ice is deposited at 140-165 K, CO2 is trapped in large quantities, greater than expected based on lower temperature studies in amorphous ice. The trapping occurs at pressures well below the condensation point for pure CO2 ice, and therefore this mechanism may allow for CO2 deposition at the poles during warmer periods. The amount of trapped CO2 varied from 3% to 16% by mass at 160 K, depending on the substrate studied. Substrates studied were a tetrahydrofuran (C4H8O) base clathrate and Fe-montmorillonite clay, an analog for Mars soil. Experimental evidence indicates that the ice structures are likely CO2 clathrate hydrates. These results have implications for the CO2 content, overall composition, and density of the polar deposits on Mars.  相似文献   

20.
The Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA), functioning as a high-resolution radiometer, has observed several appearances of the Martian residual ice caps. We examine these data to quantify both seasonal behavior and interannual differences. The northern residual cap (NRC) was found to be mostly stable with the exception of one, previously identified, region of strong variability. Interannual change in the extent of the NRC appears to be small and reversible on timescales of 1 or 2 years. The NRC has an elaborate seasonal evolution of albedo. Annuli of fine-grained CO2 and water frost, which track the inner and outer edges of the seasonal CO2 cap, cause large temporary brightenings. The NRC albedo is stable from just after solstice to Ls 150°, after which albedo decreases steadily. This late-summer darkening can be explained by shadowing within the rough topography of the NRC, leading to a lower limit on topographic relief of 80 cm. The southern residual cap (SRC) appears stable in extent. As has been previously discovered, its seasonal frost albedo behavior appears to be correlated with insolation. However, residual CO2 appears not to share this characteristic; we use this behavioral difference to infer net deposition of CO2 ice on the SRC during 1 out of 3 years. Uncharacteristically, the SRC abruptly darkens at Ls 320° in 1 Martian year (year beginning April 2002). Circumstantial evidence suggests atmospheric scattering by dust is responsible. The 2001 global dust-storm appears, either, to have had no effect on the polar cap albedos, or, resulted in slightly brighter ice deposits.  相似文献   

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