Yeah, I'm big into Mars. Guess is it one of those things where, you get an  
interest
as a kid and never grow up. Guilty as charged.
 
Billy
 
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10/10/2011 7:32:12 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Interesting. 

Good subject line, too.  

David

 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 


On 10/10/2011 2:46 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  


 
Supersaturated Water Vapor in Martian  Atmosphere

 
 
ScienceDaily (Oct. 6, 2011) — Analysis of data  collected by the European 
Space Agency's Mars Express spacecraft leaves no  room for doubt: the Martian 
atmosphere of contains water vapor in a  supersaturated state. This 
surprising finding will enable scientists to  better understand the water cycle 
on 
Mars, as well as the evolution of its  atmosphere
The research was led by a team from the Laboratoire Atmosphères, Milieux,  
Observations Spatiales (LATMOS, CNRS / UPMC / UVSQ), in collaboration with  
Russian and French colleagues(1), and received support from CNES. It is  
published in Sept. 30, 2011 issue of the journal Science. 
On Earth, water vapor tends to condense, i.e. turn into a liquid, when  the 
temperature falls below dew point. The atmosphere is said to be  
'saturated' since it cannot hold any more moisture at that temperature and  
pressure. 
The excess water vapor then condenses around suspended particles  and dust, 
forming precipitation. However, condensation may sometimes be much  slower, 
especially when particles and dust are scarce. Unable to condense,  the 
excess water vapor therefore remains in the gaseous state: this is known  as 
supersaturation. Until now, it was assumed that this phenomenon could not  
occur in the Martian atmosphere, although this had never been proved. 
While several spacecraft have visited Mars since the 1970s, most of their  
instruments were focused on surface data. Because of this, they only  
observed the horizontal component of the Martian atmosphere. The way in  which 
water content on Mars varies with height remained largely unexplored.  The 
survey carried out by the SPICAM(2) spectrometer on board the Mars  Express 
spacecraft has now made it possible to fill this gap. SPICAM can  establish 
vertical profiles of the atmosphere using solar occultation, i.e.  by observing 
light from the Sun as it travels through the Martian atmosphere  at sunrise 
and sunset. 
Contrary to previous belief, the researchers discovered that water vapor  
supersaturation is a frequent phenomenon on Mars. They even observed very  
high levels of supersaturation in the Martian atmosphere, up to ten times  
greater than those found on Earth. "This ability of water vapor to exist in  a 
highly supersaturated state would, for example, allow [it] to supply the  
southern hemisphere of Mars with water, far more efficiently than models  
currently predict," points out Franck Montmessin, CNRS researcher at LATMOS  
and 
SPICAM(3) project leader. Moreover, a far greater quantity of water  vapor 
than thought may be transported high enough in the atmosphere to be  
destroyed by photodissociation(4). If confirmed, this phenomenon would have  
consequences for the whole issue of Martian water, a significant fraction of  
which is known to have continually escaped to space for billions of years,  
which partly explains today's low abundance of water on the planet(5). 
The vertical distribution of water vapor is key to the study of the  
hydrological cycle on Mars. The hypothesis according to which the amount of  
water 
in the Martian atmosphere is limited by the saturation process  therefore 
needs revising. This finding has major implications for the  current 
understanding of both the climate and water transport on Mars. 
Notes: 
    1.  François Forget, CNRS researcher at the Laboratoire de Météorologie 
 Dynamique (LMD, CNRS/ENS Paris/UPMC/Ecole Polytechnique) took part in this 
 work. Both his laboratory and LATMOS belong to the Institut Pierre-Simon  
Laplace.  
    2.  This instrument is a dual ultraviolet and near infrared 
spectrometer,  designed and produced by three laboratories (LATMOS, the 
Institut  
d'Aéronomie Spatiale in Brussels and the Space Research Institute (IKI) in  
Moscow), with funding from CNES.  
    3.  Luca Maltagliati, the lead author of this study, received a CNES 
grant  during his post-doctorate at LATMOS.  
    4.  Solar radiation breaks up water molecules, releasing atoms of 
oxygen  and hydrogen, which are then light enough to escape to interplanetary  
space.  
    5.  On Earth, the amount of water is estimated to be equivalent to a 3  
kilometer-deep layer of liquid water over the whole surface of the planet.  
Estimates for Mars are considerably lower, although  

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
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