The State and Future of Mars Polar Science and Exploration
โ Scribed by Stephen M. Clifford; David Crisp; David A. Fisher; Ken E. Herkenhoff; Suzanne E. Smrekar; Peter C. Thomas; David D. Wynn-Williams; Richard W. Zurek; Jeffrey R. Barnes; Bruce G. Bills; Erik W. Blake; Wendy M. Calvin; Jonathan M. Cameron; Michael H. Carr; Philip R. Christensen; Benton C. Clark; Gary D. Clow; James A. Cutts; Dorthe Dahl-Jensen; William B. Durham; Fraser P. Fanale; Jack D. Farmer; Francois Forget; Kumiko Gotto-Azuma; Rejean Grard; Robert M. Haberle; William Harrison; Ralph Harvey; Alan D. Howard; Andy P. Ingersoll; Philip B. James; Jeffrey S. Kargel; Hugh H. Kieffer; Janus Larsen; Kenneth Lepper; Michael C. Malin; Daniel J. McCleese; Bruce Murray; John F. Nye; David A. Paige; Stephen R. Platt; Jeff J. Plaut; Niels Reeh; James W. Rice Jr.; David E. Smith; Carol R. Stoker; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Ellen Mosley-Thompson; Thorsteinn Thorsteinsson; Stephen E. Wood; Aaron Zent; Maria T. Zuber; H. Jay Zwally
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1020 KB
- Volume
- 144
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0019-1035
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โฆ Synopsis
As the planet's principal cold traps, the martian polar regions have accumulated extensive mantles of ice and dust that cover individual areas of โผ10 6 km 2 and total as much as 3-4 km thick. From the scarcity of superposed craters on their surface, these layered deposits are thought to be comparatively young-preserving a record of the seasonal and climatic cycling of atmospheric CO 2 , H 2 O, and dust over the past โผ10 5 -10 8 years. For this reason, the martian polar deposits may serve as a Rosetta Stone for understanding the geologic and climatic history of the planet-documenting variations in insolation (due to quasiperiodic oscillations in the planet's obliquity and orbital elements), volatile mass balance, atmospheric composition, dust storm activity, volcanic eruptions, large impacts, catastrophic floods, solar luminosity, supernovae, and perhaps even a record of microbial life. Beyond their scientific value, the polar regions may soon prove important for another reason-providing a valuable and accessible reservoir of water to support the long-term human exploration of Mars. In this paper we assess the current state of Mars polar research, identify the key questions that motivate the exploration of the polar regions, discuss the extent to which current missions will address these questions, and speculate about what additional capabilities and investigations may be required to address the issues that remain outstanding.
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Two surface samples collected from the Chryse Planitia region of Mars were heated to temperatures up to 500 ยฐC, and the volatiles that they evolved were analyzed with a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer. Only water and carbon dioxide were detected. This implies that organic compounds have not accu