Martian Landscape Shaped by CO2 not Water
Mars’ atmosphere is composed of over 95 per cent CO2, yet up until now, researchers have known very little about how it interacts with the surface of the planet.
Now, scientists have found that strange seasonal patterns on the surface of Mars are made by freezing and melting of gas not water.
The red planet has gullies that appear and then disappear on its sand dunes, much like how water forms them on Earth. And it appears ‘carbon dioxide sublimation’ – the process by which a substance changes from a solid to a gas without an intermediate liquid phase – is responsible.
Experts believe newly-discovered phenomenon is unlike anything seen on Earth.
‘However, the current Martian climate does not frequently support water in its liquid state, so it is important that we understand the role of other volatiles that are likely modifying Mars today.
‘Mars has seasons, just like Earth, which means that in winter, a lot of the CO2 in the atmosphere changes state from a gas to a solid and is deposited onto the surface in that form.
‘The process is then reversed in the spring, as the ice sublimates, and this seasonal interplay may be a really important geomorphic process.’
Dr Mary Bourke, another author of the study, added: ‘Several years ago I discovered unique markings on the surface of Martian sand dunes.
‘I called them Sand Furrows as they were elongated shallow, networked features that formed and disappeared seasonally on Martian dunes.
‘What was unusual about them was that they appeared to trend both up and down the dune slopes, which ruled out liquid water as the cause.
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