Making a Splash on Mars
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June
29, 2000 -- Last week when scientists revealed dramatic new
pictures of flood-like gullies on Mars, the big surprise wasn't
that the Red Planet might harbor water. Researchers have known
for years that water exists there. There are trace quantities
of water vapor in Mars' atmosphere and substantial amounts
of water ice at the martian poles. There may even be enough
frozen water beneath Mars' surface to fill a large ocean if melted.
What was amazing is that water may be present as a liquid
very near the planet's surface and occasionally on top of the
surface when underground deposits burst forth for a brief flash
flood.
"We have conditions on Mars that seem to forbid liquid water
very close to the surface," said Michael Carr of the USGS
at the June 22, 2000, NASA press conference.
"At high latitudes [where the gullies are located], the
temperatures are 70 to 100 degrees centigrade below freezing.
It's incredibly cold. We expect the ground to be frozen 3 to
6 km deep."
Above: Martian gullies in Newton Crater. Scientists
hypothesize that liquid water burst out from underground, eroded
the gullies, and pooled at the bottom of this crater as it froze
and evaporated. If so, life-sustaining ice and water might exist
even today below the Martian surface -- water that could potentially
support a human mission to Mars. [more from GSFC]
"The air pressure is so low on Mars that even in the most favorable spots, where the pressure is higher than average, liquid water is restricted to the range 0 to +10 °C," says Bob Haberle of the NASA/Ames Research Center. "Fresh water on Mars begins to boil at 10 °C. Here on Earth we can have water anywhere between 0 and 100 °C -- that range is reduced by a factor of ten on Mars."
If the thought of boiling water at 10 degrees °C seems bizarre, simply consult a high-altitude cookbook for a reality check. On mountaintops where the air pressure is low, water boils at a lower temperature than it does at sea level. (At 9000 ft a 'three-minute' boiled egg takes about five minutes to fully cook!) Mars simply takes the principles of high-altitude cooking to an extreme.

Above: Water on Mars. A: A 3D view of the Martian
north pole created from Mars Global Surveyor laser altimeter
data. The cap is composed mainly of solid water ice. [more
from GSFC] B:
Wispy clouds of water ice hover over the Kasai Vallis region
of Mars. [more
from GSFC] C:
Ground frost (or snow) consisting of water ice at the Viking
2 landing site on Utopia Planitia.
Although any liquid water exposed to Mars' low-pressure atmosphere
is likely to boil, vapor is not the most important repository
of martian H2O. If all the vapor in the present-day
atmosphere rained down on one spot, it would barely fill a small
pond. On the other hand, the martian poles contain lots of
water in the form of a solid. The north polar cap, composed primarily
of water ice, is 1200 km across and up to 3 km thick in some
places. The water volume there is about 4% of the Earth's south
polar ice sheet. Even more water ice is thought lie deep
underground.
| Parents and Educators: Please visit Thursday's Classroom for lesson plans and activities related to this story. |
So, the big question is not whether water exists on Mars --
it does -- but rather is there liquid water despite the planet
being so cold? The prospects for life on Mars, both human and
martian, hinge on the answer.
"First of all, you have to remember that the average atmospheric
pressure on Mars is very close to the triple point of water,"
explains Richard Hoover, an astrobiologist at the Marshall Space
Flight Center. "You only have to increase the pressure a
little bit to make liquid water possible."
The 'triple point' is
the combination of pressure (6.1 millibars) and temperature (0.01
°C) at which water can exist simultaneously in all three
states: a solid, a liquid and a gas (see the 'phase diagram'
below). On Earth, our experience with the triple point is usually
limited to ice skating. The temperature of ice on a skating rink
is just a fraction of a degree from the triple point. A little
bit of pressure on the solid ice can cause it to transform to
a liquid. The weight of a skater applied to the ice along the
blade of the skate therefore creates a thin layer of liquid water
that lubricates the blade and makes gliding possible.
On
Mars the globally-averaged surface pressure of the planet's atmosphere
is only slightly less than 6.1 millibars.
"That's the average," says Haberle, "so some places
will have pressures that are higher than 6.1 millibars and others
will be lower. If we look at sites on Mars where the pressure
is a bit higher, that's where water can theoretically exist as
a liquid."
Above: A phase diagram of water. The 'triple point'
(labeled "C" in the diagram) is the temperature and
pressure where all three types of water can exist at once. In
the diagram, note that liquid water cannot exist below 6.1 millibars.
This fact is significant because the atmospheric pressure at
the martian surface hovers just below that value. Any water that
might form on a warm afternoon from melting water would quickly
disappear in the desiccated martian atmosphere.
The Triple Point of Water The atmospheric surface pressure on Mars is remarkably close to the triple point pressure 6.1 millibars. Is that a coincidence? Some scientists think not. If the global pressure were higher and liquid water was widespread on Mars's surface, CO2 in the atmosphere would dissolve in water and react with silicate rocks, trapping atmospheric carbon dioxide in carbonate minerals. This process would thin out the atmosphere until the pressure dropped below the triple point. Thus, the martian atmosphere could be self-limiting in this respect. [more information] |
"I used the model to look for regions that meet the minimum requirements for liquid water -- above the triple point and below the boiling point," explained Haberle. "According to the model, the highest surface pressure, 12.4 millibars, occurs at the bottom of the Hellas Basin (a low-lying area created by an ancient asteroid strike). The problem is that the boiling temperature there is only +10 °C. It can't get very hot or the water will boil away."
Evaporation of water in contact with Mars' dry atmosphere is also a problem, says Haberle. "Liquid water can be stable against freezing and stable against boiling, but unstable with respect to evaporation. The situation is analogous to Earth's oceans. Liquid water on the surface does not freeze ... or boil, yet it can evaporate if the atmosphere is not saturated with water vapor. [more information]
"There are 5 five distinct regions where we might sometimes find surface water: in the Amazonis, Chryse and Elysium Planitia, in the Hellas Basin and the Argyre Basin. Together they comprise about 30% of the planet's surface. That's not to say that liquid water really does exist in those places, just that it could."
Conditions would be favorable for liquid
water only during the martian day. The temperature falls precipitously
at night, so any liquid would re-freeze. At the Viking lander
sites, for example, instruments registered temperatures as high
as -17 C in the air and +27 °C in the soil on sunlit summer
days. After sunset, thermometer readings plunged back to -60
°C or below. [click for more
information about martian temperatures]Left: The massive Hellas impact basin in the southern hemisphere of Mars is nearly 9 kilometers deep and 2,100 kilometers across. The air pressure at the bottom of the basin is about twice the global average. In this false-color image based on measurements from the Mars Global Surveyor laser altimeter, red and white colors denote high elevations and blue denotes low.
Follow the Salt...
"One thing we have to be careful of is our everyday experience that water always freezes at zero degrees," noted Hoover. "It doesn't. Water containing dissolved salts freezes at a significantly lower temperature. Don Juan Pond in Antarctica is a good example. It's a high salinity pond with liquid water at temperatures as low as -24 °C."
"Salts have the potential to significantly lower the freezing point of water," agrees Steve Clifford of the Lunar and Planetary Institute. "Indeed, there are some combinations of salts that can lower the freezing point by as much as 60 °C. However, thermodynamic and chemical stability arguments (arising from work by Benton Clark) suggest that, on Mars, the most potent freezing point-depressing brines are likely to be based on NaCl (common table salt)."
A
recent
analysis of a Martian meteorite by Arizona State University
scientists suggests that ancient martian oceans -- if they existed
-- contained a mix of salts similar to those in Earth's oceans
today. That wasn't the first clue that Mars was salty, though.
In 1976 the two Viking landers analyzed martian soil and found
that it probably contained 10 to 20 percent salts. Martian rocks,
like those on Earth, react to form salt and clay minerals when
exposed to water. On our planet this process gives rise to a
variety of brines in the western salt lakes of North America.
The detailed chemistry of the brines depends on the composition
of local rocks.Above: This cartoon, which is based on a figure presented by Dr. Ken Edgett of Malin Space Science Systems at the June 22nd NASA press conference, shows one way that gullies might form on Mars. Underground liquid water behind a barrier of ice erupts for a short-lived flash flood, creating the characteristic channels and aprons of martian gullies. The ice plugs are formed on the shadowed slopes of craters and ravines. Salts dissolved in the water behind the plug could help it stay liquid. [more from JPL]
... and go with the flow
Another way to help keep water liquid -- on Mars or Earth -- is to keep it moving.
"If you know a hard freeze is coming where you live, what's the first thing you do?" asks Hoover. "You turn your faucets on a little to let water trickle out. This way your pipes won't freeze."
The same principle applies on Mars where salty water could be moving through subterranean aquifers. "Ice is a crystal," explains Hoover, "and it's harder to form crystals when the water is flowing."
Last year, Hoover visited the Matanuska
Glacier in Alaska to search for cold-loving microorganisms living
in and around the ice. "I chose the Matanuska Glacier to visit because it's accessible and has dark rock in contact with ice," says Hoover. "The sun shining on the rock causes the ice to melt. There are pools of liquid water where microorganisms grow in abundance. There is something very interesting and exciting about this picture of me taking samples from the edge of a moulin (a water-carved crevasse). Most of what we see is ice and the air temperature is below freezing, yet there is liquid water pouring out of the glacier. How is that possible? The water had broken free further back up the glacier where sunlit rocks melted the ice. Then it flowed beneath the ice until it broke through a hole in the wall of the ice. Everything the liquid water came in contact with was freezing, yet the moving water did not freeze.
"I have also seen liquid water running from snow melting on dark rocks heated by sunlight in Antarctica, even though the air temperature was below -20 °C."
Above: Sampling ice from a moulin in the tongue of Alaska's Matanuska glacier. Orange moss can be seen growing on broken rock debris on ice ledge [larger image]. (Photos Courtesy Richard B. Hoover)
There are many places on Earth where liquid water and ice
co-exist in sub-zero conditions, says Hoover. The most famous
example is Lake Vostok, an expanse of water roughly the size
of lake Ontario lying 4 km beneath the Antarctic ice sheet. The
ice sheet acts as a blanket, shielding the lake from Mars-like
temperatures at the surface.
Will explorers one day discover oases like Lake Vostok beneath
icy terrain on Mars? No one knows. But instead of "Follow
the Water," the mantra of future colonists on the red planet
might well be "Follow the Salt."
Stay tuned to Science@NASA for continuing series of stories
about Water on Mars.
JPL manages the Mars Global Surveyor Mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, DC. Malin Space Science Systems built and operates the camera system. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA. JPL's industrial partner is Lockheed Martin Astronautics, Denver, CO, which developed and operates the spacecraft.
Web LinksMars Global Surveyor Home Page - from NASA/JPL
Malin
Space Science Systems
-- MSSS operates and processes data from instruments on planetary
missions under contract to the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
Science@NASA
Stories about Mars:
Martian Swiss Cheese -- March 9, 2000. New pictures
from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft show exotic terrain
made of dry ice near the Red Planet's south pole.
Unearthing
Clues to Martian Fossils -- June 11, 1999. The hunt for
signs of ancient life on Mars is leading scientists to an otherworldly
lake on Earth.
The Red
Planet in 3D -- May 27, 1999. New data from Mars Global
Surveyor reveal the topography of Mars better than many continental
regions on Earth.
Search for Life on Mars will Start in Siberia -- May 27, 1999. NASA funds permafrost study to support astrobiology research.

