NASA'S MARS ORBITER REVEALS THAT WATER FLOWED ON THE RED PLANET FOR LONGER THAN EXPECTED
Washington:
Water on Mars is thought to have evaporated roughly 3 billion years ago.
However,
two scientists reviewing data from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
discovered traces of liquid water on Mars as recently as 2 billion to 2.5
billion years ago, implying that water flowed there for a billion years longer
than previously thought.
The
findings, which were published in the journal AGU Advances, focus on the
chloride salt deposits left behind as freezing meltwater evaporated across the
terrain.
While
the structure of some valley networks suggested that water may have flowed on
Mars lately, the salt deposits are the first mineral evidence that liquid water
existed.
The
discovery raises new questions about how long, if at all, microbial life could
have thrived on Mars. Wherever there is water, there is life, at least on
Earth.
Ellen
Leask, a post-doctoral researcher at Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics
Laboratory, and Bethany Ehlmann, a professor at California Institute of
Technology (Caltech), used data from the MRO's Compact Reconnaissance Imaging
Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) instrument to map the chloride salts across the
clay-rich highlands of Mars' southern hemisphere, which are pocked by impact
craters.
One
of the keys to dating the salts was the number of craters: the less craters a
terrain has, the younger it is. Scientists can estimate the age of an area of
the surface by counting the number of craters on it.
MRO
has two cameras that would be ideal for this task. With its black-and-white
wide-angle lens, the Context Camera aids scientists in mapping the area of the
chlorides.
Scientists
use the High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) colour camera to
zoom in on details as small as a Mars rover from orbit, allowing them to
observe details as small as a rover from space.
Leask
and Ehlmann discovered several of the salts in depressions on gently sloping
volcanic plains, which were originally home to little ponds, using both cameras
to build digital elevation maps.
The
researchers also discovered twisting, dry channels nearby, which were once
streams that supplied surface runoff (from ice or permafrost melting) into
these ponds. They were able to date the deposits using crater counting and
indications of salts on top of volcanic landscape.
"What's
amazing is that MRO has led to fresh findings regarding the nature and timing
of these river-connected ancient salt ponds after more than a decade of
supplying high-resolution image, stereo, and infrared data," said Ehlmann,
CRISM's deputy main scientist.
NASA's
Mars Odyssey orbiter, which launched in 2001, detected the salt crystals for
the first time 14 years ago.
MRO,
which has higher-resolution equipment than Odyssey, was launched in 2005 and
has been researching the salts, among other things, on Mars since then.
Comments
Post a Comment