[LINK] 'Mars has Lost Over 100 Million Cubic Kilometers of Water Since Formation"

Feb 03, 2015 18:34

The Dragon's Tales linked to a paper, "Photochemical escape of oxygen from early Mars", looking at Mars' atmosphere and lost water.

Photochemical escape is an important process for oxygen escape from present Mars. In this work, a 1-D Monte-Carlo Model is developed to calculate escape rates of energetic oxygen atoms produced from O2+ dissociative recombination reactions (DR) under 1, 3, 10, and 20 times present solar XUV fluxes. We found that although the overall DR rates increase with solar XUV flux almost linearly, oxygen escape rate increases from 1× to 10× present solar XUV conditions but decreases when increasing solar XUV flux further. Analysis shows that atomic species in the upper thermosphere of early Mars increases more rapidly than O2+ when increasing XUV fluxes. While the latter is the source of energetic O atoms, the former increases the collision probability and thus decreases the escape probability of energetic O. Our results suggest that photochemical escape be a less important escape mechanism than previously thought for the loss of water and/or CO2 from early Mars.

For comparison, the latest estimates for Earth suggest that our world has more than 300 million cubic kilometres of water. The water Mars lost, in this estimate, would apparently be enough to cover the surface of the planet two metres deep.

history, oceans, astronomy, mars, space science, links

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