SCI Mars' Atmosphere Blew Away Billions of Years Ago

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.realclearscience.com/art...e_blew_away_billions_of_years_ago_109680.html

July 2, 2016

Mars' Atmosphere Blew Away Billions of Years Ago

By Ramin Skibba


Editor's Note: This article was provided by Inside Science. The original is here.

(Inside Science) -- Mars was once a habitable world like its larger neighbor Earth, with liquid water on the surface and protected by a thick atmosphere. But rather than becoming a possible haven for microbial Martians and other lifeforms, the young world lost most of its atmosphere between three and four billion years ago. In new research using a NASA space probe orbiting Mars, scientists found that intense solar storms and ejections from the sun likely swept away those protective layers.

"Solar radiation and solar wind drove Mars' atmospheric escape," said Shannon Curry, a planetary physicist at the University of California, Berkeley. She presented her team's findings June 14 at the American Astronomical Society meeting in San Diego, California.

Curry and her colleagues base their conclusions on detailed observations taken by NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution spacecraft, known as MAVEN. Launched in November 2013, it reached Mars orbit in September 2014, where it continues to monitor clouds of plasma and charged particles that periodically arrive from the sun and interact with what's left of its upper atmosphere.

Like early Earth, Mars used to have a warmer climate, potentially friendly to the building blocks of life, indicated by valley networks likely carved by water flow that show up on the planet's ancient surfaces. But eons ago, its climate changed dramatically.

"All the indications are that loss of atmosphere to space has been a major process in the change in climate," said Bruce Jakosky, a physicist at the University of Colorado Boulder, and principal investigator for the mission. "We're getting at the history of habitability of Mars, and that's something we can apply to exoplanets," he said in an interview.

The sun frequently shoots out streams of charged particles, often called solar wind. It also produces solar flares and storms that hurl bursts of plasma into space, which sometimes happen to head in the direction of orbiting planets. The Earth possesses a global magnetic field, allowing it to withstand this bombardment of magnetized particles. But Mars' global magnetic field faded away about four billion years ago, removing a crucial shield for the atmosphere.

In the ensuing hundreds of millions of years, continued solar storms gradually drove away Mars' atmosphere. Meanwhile, life began to arise on Earth.

MAVEN's detailed measurements led Curry and her colleagues to attribute much of this lost atmosphere to a process simply referred to as "sputtering." This involves the charged particles in the solar wind bouncing oxygen atoms away like billiard balls. Without oxygen, there can be neither carbon dioxide for the protective atmosphere nor water.

Other processes were at play as well, stripping away Mars' atmosphere over time. Curry likens these to winds eroding a desert creek bed, but she says that the hyperactive sun in the distant past produced so many solar storms that sputtering acted more like a flood, washing away the atmosphere on a short planetary time-scale.

Some Mars-sized planets orbiting in other stellar systems, such as Kepler-138b discovered a year ago, could suffer a similar fate. "Mars is our ground truth for understanding planets this size," Curry said.

Mars' period of habitability -- at least for microbes if not more complex life -- lasted for a few hundred million years or perhaps longer. It remains difficult to extrapolate back into Martian history, however, because Mars' limited atmosphere and seasons vary so much. More importantly, the sun's activity exhibits even more variability, appearing calm one year and launching multiple ejections of plasma the next.

"How long you observe matters because of the 11-year solar cycle," said Mats Holmstrom, a scientist at the Swedish Institute of Space Physics and principal investigator of an instrument measuring solar wind aboard the Mars Express spacecraft. Mars Express has been studying the planet's lower atmosphere since 2004. It and MAVEN are on complementary missions, Holmstrom said in an interview.

If it turns out that many other planets are habitable only for relatively short time periods like Mars, Curry said, then life on a planet might have come and gone long before astronomers on Earth could notice them.


Ramin Skibba is a science writer based in Santa Cruz and San Diego, California. He writes at http://raminskibba.net and tweets at @raminskibba.
 

Cardinal

Chickministrator
_______________
So, just like, If apes evolved into humans why didn't all apes, if Mars had it's atmosphere stripped why didn't earth? Why did that magnetic shield "fade away" there but not here?
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
So, like, if Venus grabbed all the air and water as it came in past Mars, then brought it past Earth on her way towards the sun, most of the water and atmosphere of both planets could have been stretched out in a big streamer between them briefly, because they are almost the same size. That could be when a lot of humans were exposed to enough radiation from the sun and outer space to start DE-volving into apes, before Earth won the tug-of-war because she is a little bit bigger, more massive, than Venus.

(:
 

Dosadi

Brown Coat
There they go with that "likely" supposition that really says

Here is a guess, maybe it is true, maybe not. No way to know for sure, but we will present it like it is fact to entertain folks.

Just like that boy that says:

serveimage
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
So, just like, If apes evolved into humans why didn't all apes, if Mars had it's atmosphere stripped why didn't earth? Why did that magnetic shield "fade away" there but not here?

Watch the videos in the Earth Sciences sub-forum here about electrical scarring of the earth eons ago. Mars was once in the inner solar system, and by inner solar system I mean between the Earth AND the Sun, and that Jupiter once inhabited the space where Mars is now located.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Yep. The loss of what atmosphere they had was a result of the loss of their magnetic shield. It allowed the solar wind and CMEs to scour off the atmosphere into space. That has been known for a long long time if this granny knows it. But the idea that it was once "habitable" is a bit of a hypothetical stretch, habitable maybe by some primitive bacteria or "life" maybe, but I seriously doubt that any intelligent life ever did or will occupy Mars.
 

Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
So, just like, If apes evolved into humans why didn't all apes, if Mars had it's atmosphere stripped why didn't earth? Why did that magnetic shield "fade away" there but not here?


My take on this is that Earth survived because it was once a 'water-world'. And maybe some time in the far distant future, it'll be just like Mars is today...size included.

Mars was once a lot bigger than it is now...because of all the water it had then. According to some scientific papers, Earth has lost about 25% of the water it once had.

http://sciencenordic.com/earth-has-lost-quarter-its-water

(Notice how they have just proved the Bible correct in its description of Earth's beginning?)

Mars was like Earth is now...and earth was a 'water world'...but the water got broken down into its molecules and the lighter gasses went into space. And just like everything else, it shrank as the water left it. Mars' magnetic shield 'faded away' because as the water dried up, its core couldn't spin as fast and easily as before. Finally enough water left that the core stopped moving. No 'dynamo' no electric current and no magnetism.

I could go on, but I believe you can fill in the rest...like, as the planet got smaller, gravity got less and the loss of water increased.

Water is more than just the 'life blood' for plants and animals. It is the 'life blood' of the planet, itself, too.
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
Why did Mars lose all its protective features, the magnetosphere on Earth is due to the iron content of the planet which will not go away. The solar wind exists all the time but there is no theory as to why Mars suddenly lost its atmosphere if indeed it ever had one.

Does Mars have a core like the Earth? What are the similarities structurally between the Earth and Mars?

Unfortunately, very little information is available about the interior (core) of Mars. It is estimated that Mars' core is between 2200-4000 km (1400-2500 miles) across and could account for 6-21% of its mass. It is thought to consist mostly of iron, but it is not known if the core is solid or liquid.
 
Last edited:

Doc1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
There is so much that we don't understand about our own solar system, much less the rest of the universe that the various hypotheses are akin to kindergartners trying to describe God, cold fusion and the emotions of women in the same sentence. The Earth does indeed have a magnetosphere which largely protects us from solar wind, yet we also have considerably more mass than Mars. It is this mass that accounts for our surface pressure. Should the same composition of Earth's atmosphere somehow be magically transported to Mars, humans still could not live on Mars' surface without artificial assistance. Why? Simple: the gravity of Mars could not hold sufficient atmospheric pressure to make human life viable. Currently, Mars' atmosphere (for all intents and practical purposes) approaches what we would consider a vacuum. Yes, it has an atmosphere, but it's very thin.

Earth's atmosphere is roughly 80% nitrogen and 20% oxygen. Yes, it's more complex than this with various trace gasses and (especially) CO2 but I'm keeping this simple, k? Now this doesn't mean that any planet with an Earth-like atmospheric composition would be habitable because atmospheric composition doesn't take into account pressure. Our surface (sea level) pressure is 14.7 PSI. Let's use the example of the summit of Mt. Everest. It's atmospheric composition is virtually the same as that anywhere on Earth, yet its ambient pressure is only 4.89 PSI. No one - to include the hearty Sherpas, who are used to living at high altitudes - can live at Everest's summit. They - and various international explorers - can get to the summit (usually with additional oxygen supplies) and stay briefly, but they can't live there. The surface pressure of Mars is only .087 PSI and is mostly CO2, so again, even if Mars' atmospheric composition was identical to Earth's, it would still be uninhabitable because of the low pressure.

At some point in the future, it may be possible to increase the density of the Martian atmosphere and increase its oxygen content, but because the planet is so much smaller than Earth (and has a correspondingly lesser mass), it will never be possible to give it an atmospheric density close to Earth's. Interestingly, this problem works in reverse as well. A planet with an identical atmospheric composition as the Earth would also be uninhabitable if its pressures were too high! Oxygen, which is essential for life, is also highly toxic at higher pressures and concentrations! Believe it or not, a 100% pure oxygen atmoshere at Earth's modest 14.7 PSI surface pressure would kill any human being in a fairly short period of time! This is why divers and patients receiving oxygen therapy in hospital have to have their blood gasses monitored (or in the case of divers, follow certain tables).

Humans - even the toughest of us - are actually pretty fragile creatures in the grand (cosmic) scheme of things and can only survive within very narrow parameters of gas mixtures and pressures, radiation exposures, temperatures and environmental chemical influences. It's really miraculous that we're here at all!

Best regards
Doc
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Very interesting.


Seems C. S. Lewis--who was NOT a scientist but a Professor of Languages at Cambridge---was closer to the truth than he or anyone else guessed in his hypothetical "Perelandra" fantasy /science-fiction trilogy, the first book of which is Out of the Silent Planet, written in 1938.

In this book, an Englishman named Ransom is kidnapped and taken against his will to Mars, where he meets the ruling spirit (angel) of that planet. At one point, this being describes to him events on Mars that took place eons before man ever appeared on earth, as he describes how the atmosphere was stripped from Mars:


"Then you knew of our journey before we left Thulcandra ?"

"No. Thulcandra is the world we do not know. It alone is outside the heaven, and no message comes from it."

Ransom was silent, but Oyarsa answered his unspoken questions.

"It was not always so. Once we knew the Oyarsa of your world - he was brighter and greater than I - and then we did not call it Thulcandra. It is the longest of all stories and the bitterest. He became bent. That was before any life came on your world. Those were the Bent Years of which we still speak in the heavens, when he was not yet bound to Thulcandra but free like us. It was in his mind to spoil other worlds besides his own. He smote your moon with his left hand and with his right he brought the cold death on my harandra before its time; if by my arm Maleldil had not opened the handramits and let out the hot springs, my world would have been unpeopled. We did not leave him so at large for long. There was great war, and we drove him back out of the heavens and bound him in the air of his own world as Maleldil taught us. There doubtless he lies to this hour, and we know no more of that planet: it is silent. We think that Maleldil would not give it up utterly to the Bent One, and there are stones among us that He has taken strange counsel and dared terrible things, wrestling with the Bent One in Thulcandra. But of this we know less than you; it is a thing we desire to look into."


http://pdbooks.ca/pdbooks/english/L.../6aro9c_files/OEBPS/Text/index_split_021.html
 
Last edited:
Top