Photo by the Viking 1 orbiter in June 1976, showing a thin Martian atmosphere (NASA/Viking 1) Photo by the Viking 1 orbiter in June 1976, showing a thin Martian atmosphere (NASA/Viking 1)

The current atmosphere of Mars is tenuous, with a surface pressure only about 3% of Earth’s, and consisting mostly of carbon dioxide. Almost no liquid water is present on Mars, although the polar caps contain frozen water and carbon dioxide (dry ice).

However, evidence exists from the rocks studied by NASA’s rovers, including the Mars Curiosity Rover, as well as images of dry river beds made by orbiting observatories such as NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, that the Martian atmosphere 3.5 billion years ago was denser and warmer due the Greenhouse effect and supported the presence of liquid water at the surface. The following questions arise, “Why did Mars lose its water and dense atmosphere?” And “Where did all the volatiles (i.e., water and carbon dioxide) go?”

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The current thinking is that the atmosphere and surface volatiles can either be lost up or down or both. Volatiles can be consumed by the Martian crust and stored as minerals, and the Curiosity rover and its science team is studying this type of loss. And atmospheric species can also escape to space from the top of the atmosphere, and NASA’s MAVEN mission is studying this. The mission principal investigator, Bruce Jakosky, is leading a team of about 100 scientists from around the world. MAVEN is the NASA acronym for “Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution”.

NASA’s MAVEN Spacecraft: Studying The Ionosphere Of Mars

The MAVEN spacecraft was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in November 2013 on a Delta booster and went into orbit around Mars a year later. The spacecraft has 8 instruments designed to characterize the upper atmosphere of the planet and the processes controlling the atmosphere, including how atoms and molecules can escape the gravitational attraction of the planet and escape to space. The instruments measure atmospheric densities and temperatures for both the electrically neutral (e.g., carbon dioxide, CO 2 , atomic oxygen, O, atomic hydrogen, H, and other species) and the electrically charged constituents (that is, ions such as CO 2 + and O 2 +, and electrons). Other instruments detect energetic charged particles, magnetic fields, and ultraviolet radiation. The MAVEN team also includes scientists who construct computer models of the Martian atmosphere and space environment in order to interpret the spacecraft data.

In order for an atom or molecule to escape a planet, two things are required: (1) its speed must exceed the escape speed, which is 5 km/s for Mars and 10 km/s for Earth, and (2) it must be high enough in the atmosphere such that it does not collide with another atom on its way out (this part of the atmosphere is called an exosphere). The ionized portion of the uppermost atmosphere, called the ionosphere, can provide a means of giving atoms high enough speeds to escape. The MAVEN Mission is studying the ionosphere of Mars.

Ionospheres are formed when external radiation, or energetic particles, ionize a neutral molecule, knocking off an orbital electron (which is then called a photoelectron or a secondary electron) and creating a positive ion. The most important ionizing source is photoionization by solar ultraviolet radiation, which is produced in the outer layers of the solar atmosphere (i.e, the solar corona). This radiation, like all electromagnetic radiation, is packaged into photons, which each contain an energy proportional to the frequency of the radiation. If a photon has an energy exceeding the binding energy of an atomic orbital electron then ionization occurs.

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The ionization of neutral CO 2 and O produces CO 2 + and O+ ions. Chemical reactions (e.g., CO 2 + reacts with O to give O 2 + ions, that is, ionized molecular oxygen) modify the composition of the ionosphere. And in order to balance electrical charge, the ions and electrons eventually recombine. For Mars, the key recombination reaction is of O 2 + ions with electrons (called dissociative recombination), which produces two fast neutral O atoms. About half these atoms have speeds greater than the escape speed and thus have the possibility of leaving Mars. This “photochemical” escape process has been identified as being of great importance for Mars (but not, interestingly, for Venus, which has a higher escape speed).

MAVEN scientists are quantifying the loss of oxygen (leading ultimately to the loss of CO 2 or H 2 O from the lower atmosphere) by studying the relevant ionospheric processes discussed above in two ways. The first way is by measuring the densities of electrons and O 2 + ions, as well as neutral densities, and then calculating the oxygen photochemical loss rate. The second approach, discussed in a recent paper in the Journal of Geophysical Research (doi: 10.1002/2016JA023461), is to bookkeep on solar UV photons entering the top of the atmosphere and that are energetic enough to create ions.

This study determined 2 kilograms of atomic oxygen is lost to the planet every second. This does not seem a very large loss rate, but it has taken place relentlessly for more than 2 billion years, and the equivalent water or CO 2 lost over this time period is in excess of several meters of liquid water spread over the whole surface of Mars. This estimate takes into account the fact that the ultraviolet irradiance of the Sun was considerably larger in the distant past, as confirmed by astronomical measurements of younger Sun-like stars in the nearby galaxy.

This study, Hot oxygen escape from Mars: Simple scaling with solar EUV irradiance was recently published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics.

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