New Model Explains The Water Cycles of Mars’s Swiss Cheese-Looking South Pole

Posted: March 12, 2023 by oldbrew in atmosphere, Cycles, History, modelling, pressure, research, Temperature
Tags: ,

Mars [image credit: NASA]


It’s said to be related to the current obliquity cycle period of about 100,000 years. Mystery solved?
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Seen from space, regions of Mars around the south pole have a bizarre, pitted “Swiss cheese” appearance, says ScienceAlert.

These formations come from alternating massive deposits of CO2 ice and water ice, similar to different layers of a cake.

For decades, planetary scientists wondered how this formation was possible, as it was long believed that this layering would not be stable for long periods of time.

But in 2020, Peter Buhler, a Research Scientist at the Planetary Science Institute, and a team of researchers figured out the dynamics of how the Swiss cheese-like terrain formed: It was due to changes in Mars’s axial tilt that caused changes in the atmospheric pressure, which alternately produced water and CO2 ice.

But they were only able to deduce the rate of CO2 and water deposits over millions of years, which is about ten times longer than Mars’ orbit cycles.

Now, in a follow-up study, Buhler was able to model how the frozen carbon dioxide and water deposits grow and shrink over 100,000 year-long cycles of Mars’s polar tilt.

The model allowed the researchers to determine how water and carbon dioxide have moved around on Mars over the past 510,000 years.

“Mars experiences 100,000-year cycles in which its poles vary from tilting more toward or away from the Sun”, Buhler said, in a press release.

“These variations cause the amount of sunlight shining on each latitude band, and thus the temperature of each band, to cycle, too. Water ice moves from warmer to colder regions during these cycles, driving Mars’ basic long-term global water cycle.”

The layered deposits of H2O and CO2 ice can provide a record of Mars’s climate history, as the south polar ice cap is the only place on the red planet where frozen carbon dioxide persists on the surface year-round.

“This layering is important because it is a direct record of how water and carbon dioxide have moved around on Mars,” Buhler said.

“The water layer thicknesses tell us how much water vapor has been in Mars’s atmosphere and how that water vapor has moved around the globe. The carbon dioxide layers tell us the history of how much of the atmosphere froze onto the ground, and thus how thick or thin Mars’s atmosphere was in the past.”

Buhler explained that knowing the history of Mars’s atmospheric pressure and availability of water is critical to understanding the basic workings of Mars’s climate and near-surface geologic, chemical, and perhaps even biologic history.

“Before this study, the rate at which water moves through this cycle has been highly uncertain,” he said. “This study addresses this open question by deciphering the layered ice record in Mars’s south polar cap.”

Full article here.
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From an original Universe Today article.

Study: A 510,000-Year Record of Mars’ Climate (2023)

Comments
  1. oldbrew says:

    From the study:
    Key Points

    — H2O ice layers in Mars’ Massive CO2 Ice Deposit record obliquity-mediated rates of midlatitude-to-pole H2O transport over the past 510 kyr

    — The record’s unique CO2 cold-trapping environment isolates the orbit-forcing signal from other processes, simplifying its interpretation

    — Orbit-resolved H2O transport rates place an important new quantitative bound on processes driving Mars’ recent (∼3.5 Myr) global water cycle

  2. JB says:

    Assuming a uniformitarian view of the galaxy’s devolution.

  3. oldbrew says:

    “Mars experiences 100,000-year cycles in which its poles vary from tilting more toward or away from the Sun”, Buhler said, in a press release.

    Curiously similar to something else…

    100,000-year problem

    The 100,000-year problem refers to the lack of an obvious explanation for the periodicity of ice ages at roughly 100,000 years for the past million years, but not before, when the dominant periodicity corresponded to 41,000 years.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100%2C000-year_problem

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