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Mars NASA Space

MAVEN Spies Mars' Atmosphere Leaching Out Into Space 63

astroengine writes: Early results from NASA's recently arrived MAVEN Mars spacecraft show an extensive, tenuous cloud of hydrogen surrounding the red planet, the result of water breaking down in the atmosphere, scientists said Tuesday. MAVEN, an acronym for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution, arrived on Sept. 21 to help answer questions about what caused a planet that was once warm and wet to turn into the cold, dry desert that appears today. "It's measurements like these that will allow us to estimate the escape rate of hydrogen from the Martian atmosphere to space today. It's an important measurement to make because the hydrogen ... comes from water lower down in the atmosphere," MAVEN scientist Mike Chaffin, with the University of Colorado, Boulder, told reporters on a conference call.
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MAVEN Spies Mars' Atmosphere Leaching Out Into Space

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  • by TheDarkMaster ( 1292526 ) on Wednesday October 15, 2014 @07:31AM (#48148197)
    So, in the long term the tendency is Mars losing their atmosphere and become a rock without air. Bad news for terraforming plans and long-term colonies :-(
    • If you terraformed Mars today, the atmosphere would still stay there for a very long time (think more than thousands of years, or rather millions, I guess).
      • by itzly ( 3699663 )
        Thousands of years isn't very long, even on the scale of human civilization.
      • Not without a big upgrade to add a strong magnetic field.
        • It still takes a lot of time to erode an atmosphere. And this is most likely not a first order process; the erosion rate is limited by the incident radiation/particle rate. Plus It's currently leaking something like a few grams per second, despite still having teratonnes of mass. Even if it scaled in proportion with the mass, you'd still be safe for a very, very long time.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      So, in the long term the tendency is Mars losing their atmosphere and become a rock without air. Bad news for terraforming plans and long-term colonies :-(

      Ignoring basic physics, that would be true. However, no, mars will not lose its atmosphere because the atmosphere is held down by a fundamental force in the universe - gravity. It's the same thing that keeps the Earth's atmosphere from dissipating into space as well, as well as a magnetic field that helps repel the solar wind produced by the sun trying to

      • I think you misunderstand my concern. I know that the atmosphere is not going anywhere in the short term by exactly the factors you described. What concerned me on the probe data is the long-term. For example, if the water continues decomposing as the probe detected without having something to replace it, then sometime in the future the planet really will not have any more water (ignoring here the possibility of underground ice, as we do no have enough data about this yet). And if in the distant future some
    • Unless I'm mistaken, what causes the atmosphere to "leak" so profusely is the lack of a strong magnetic field (which the Earth has due to it's molten iron core).

      To me, this means that to terraform Mars, we'd have to have the technology to "restart" Mars' core, a la "The Core", as in the movie. Theoretically, that'd bring the magnetic field back and protect the atmosphere. Then the plant part can start.

      That significantly raises the bar on the technology that is required to terraform the planet, so I don't ex

    • None of the terraforming ideas make any sense without a magnetosphere.

    • Colonizing Mars was really just a pipe dream anyway. The core of Mars is dead (no longer liquid and spinning), so the planet is dead. It makes sense. Trying to terraform is it like trying to bring the dead back to life. In the best case, you'll get Frankenstein's monster. In the worst, nothing will come of it.

  • Good images, but quite useless to view without a little information. How does the Spectrograph present it's images - or a better question - how long did it take for MAVEN to collect the data for these few preliminary images? The voids in two images make them appear to be incomplete.

    I'm wondering what effect our past missions have made to build up the hydrogen cloud around Mars, and how well Mar's two moons sweep up the high atmosphere.

  • I'd love to see how it compares to the expected values. Can you stick it into a model based on the known equations, turn the crank, and tell what the temperature used to be on Mars thousands of years ago? Hrmm, would be a fun thesis topic.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A... [wikipedia.org]

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