EVOLUTIONARY IMPACT OF SPUTTERING OF THE MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE BY O+ PICKUP IONS

被引:196
作者
LUHMANN, JG
JOHNSON, RE
ZHANG, MHG
机构
[1] UNIV VIRGINIA,THORNTON HALL,CHARLOTTESVILLE,VA 22903
[2] UNIV CALIF LOS ANGELES,INST GEOPHYS & PLANETARY PHYS,LOS ANGELES,CA 90024
[3] AUSTRIAN ACAD SCI,SPACE RES INST,DEPT F SPACE PHYS,A-8010 GRAZ,AUSTRIA
关键词
D O I
10.1029/92GL02485
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Nonthermal processes such as dissociative recombination of ionospheric molecules are known to lead to loss of atmospheric constituents (N, O, C) at Mars where the gravitational potential is easily overcome by the energy imparted to the product atoms. Moreover, observations of escaping planetary ions on the PHOBOS-2 spacecraft showed that the solar wind is presently scavenging significant amounts of both oxygen and molecular species as it flows past the planet. Because both the sun and the atmosphere of Mars have changed over time, the evolutionary importance of these processes cannot be estimated by simply multiplying the contemporary loss rates by the solar system age. Models of these loss mechamisms must include consideration of the evolution of the solar EUV intensity and solar wind and their effects. Here we describe calculations of solar wind-induced loss rates for evolving solar and atmospheric conditions like those described by Zhang et al. [1992a], but including sputtering of the Martian atmosphere by reentering O+ pickup ions. The inclusion of the sputter loss increases by about 30% the cumulative, estimated loss of oxygen to that in approximately 50 m of water (global surface depth) over the last approximately 3.5 billion years, when contemporary loss mechanisms are thought to have become dominant. More significant is the result that these ions also sputter CO2 and its fragments in substantial amounts. That integrated loss is equivalent to approximately 0. 14 bar atmospheric CO2 pressure, of the order of some estimates of Mars' early atmospheric inventory.
引用
收藏
页码:2151 / 2154
页数:4
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