http://physorg.com/news75049938.html

Findings Suggest Jets Bursting From Martian Ice Cap

Artist concept showing sand-laden jets shoot into the Martian polar sky. 
Image credit: Arizona State University/Ron Miller
Every spring brings violent eruptions to the south polar ice cap of 
Mars, according to researchers interpreting new observations by NASA's 
Mars Odyssey orbiter.

Jets of carbon dioxide gas erupting from the ice cap as it warms in the 
spring carry dark sand and dust high aloft. The dark material falls back 
to the surface, creating dark patches on the ice cap which have long 
puzzled scientists. Deducing the eruptions of carbon dioxide gas from 
under the warming ice cap solves the riddle of the spots. It also 
reveals that this part of Mars is much more dynamically active than had 
been expected for any part of the planet.

"If you were there, you'd be standing on a slab of carbon-dioxide ice," 
said Phil Christensen of Arizona State University, Tempe, principal 
investigator for Odyssey's camera. "All around you, roaring jets of 
carbon dioxide gas are throwing sand and dust a couple hundred feet into 
the air."

You'd also feel vibration through your spacesuit boots, he said. "The 
ice slab you're standing on is levitated above the ground by the 
pressure of gas at the base of the ice."

The team began its research in an attempt to explain mysterious dark 
spots, fan-like markings, and spider-shaped features seen in images that 
cameras on Odyssey and on NASA's Mars Global Surveyor have observed on 
the ice cap at the Martian south pole.

The dark spots, typically 15 to 46 meters (50 to 150 feet) wide and 
spaced several hundred feet apart, appear every southern spring as the 
sun rises over the ice cap. They last for several months and then vanish 
-- only to reappear the next year, after winter's cold has deposited a 
fresh layer of ice on the cap. Most spots even seem to recur at the same 
locations.

An earlier theory proposed that the spots were patches of warm, bare 
ground exposed as the ice disappeared. However, the camera on Odyssey, 
which sees in both infrared and visible-light wavelengths, discovered 
that the spots are nearly as cold as the carbon dioxide ice, suggesting 
they were just a thin layer of dark material lying on top of the ice and 
kept chilled by it. To understand how that layer is produced, 
Christensen's team used the camera -- the Thermal Emission Imaging 
System -- to collect more than 200 images of one area of the ice cap 
from the end of winter through midsummer.

Some places remained spot-free for more than 100 days, then developed 
many spots in a week. Fan-shaped dark markings didn't form until days or 
weeks after the spots appeared, yet some fans grew to half a mile in 
length. Even more puzzling was the origin of the "spiders," grooves 
eroded into the surface under the ice. The grooves converge at points 
directly beneath a spot.

"The key to figuring out the spiders and the spots was thinking through 
a physical model for what was happening," said Christensen. The process 
begins in the sunless polar winter when carbon dioxide from the 
atmosphere freezes into a layer about three feet thick on top of a 
permanent ice cap of water ice, with a thin layer of dark sand and dust 
in between. In spring, sunlight passing through the slab of carbon 
dioxide ice reaches the dark material and warms it enough that the ice 
touching the ground sublimates -- turns into gas.

Before long, the swelling reservoir of trapped gas lifts the slab and 
eventually breaks through at weak spots that become vents. High-pressure 
gas roars through at speeds of 161 kilometers per hour (100 miles per 
hour) or more. Under the slab, the gas erodes ground as it rushes toward 
the vents, snatching up loose particles of sand and carving the spidery 
network of grooves.

Christensen, Hugh Kieffer (U.S. Geological Survey, retired) and Timothy 
Titus (USGS) report the new interpretation in the Aug. 17, 2006, issue 
of the journal Nature.

-- 
Greg Williams
K4HSM
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.twiar.org
http://www.etskywarn.net


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