From Newsgroup: sci.space.news
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6707
Small Troughs Growing on Mars May Become 'Spiders'
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
December 20, 2016
Erosion-carved troughs that grow and branch during multiple Martian years
may be infant versions of larger features known as Martian "spiders,"
which are radially patterned channels found only in the south polar region
of Mars.
Researchers using NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) report the
first detection of cumulative growth, from one Martian spring to another,
of channels resulting from the same thawing-carbon-dioxide process believed
to form the spider-like features.
The spiders range in size from tens to hundreds of yards (or meters).
Multiple channels typically converge at a central pit, resembling the
legs and body of a spider. For the past decade, researchers have checked
in vain with MRO's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE)
camera to see year-to-year changes in them.
"We have seen for the first time these smaller features that survive and extend from year to year, and this is how the larger spiders get started," said Ganna Portyankina of the University of Colorado, Boulder. "These
are in sand-dune areas, so we don't know whether they will keep getting
bigger or will disappear under moving sand."
Dunes appear to be a factor in how the baby spiders form, but they may
also keep many from persisting through the centuries needed to become full-scale spiders. The amount of erosion needed to sculpt a typical spider, at the rate determined from observing active growth of these smaller troughs, would require more than a thousand Martian years. That is according to
an estimate by Portyankina and co-authors in a recent paper in the journal Icarus. One Martian year lasts about 1.9 Earth years.
"Much of Mars looks like Utah if you stripped away all vegetation, but 'spiders' are a uniquely Martian landform," said Candice Hansen of the Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, Arizona, a co-author of the report.
Carbon-dioxide ice, better known as "dry ice," does not occur naturally
on Earth. On Mars, sheets of it cover the ground during winter in areas
near both poles, including the south-polar regions with spidery terrain.
Dark fans appear in these areas each spring.
Hugh Kieffer of the Space Science Institute in Boulder put those factors together in 2007 to deduce the process linking them: Spring sunshine penetrates
the ice to warm the ground underneath, causing some carbon dioxide on
the bottom of the sheet to thaw into gas. The trapped gas builds pressure until a crack forms in the ice sheet. Gas erupts out, and gas beneath
the ice rushes toward the vent, picking up particles of sand and dust.
This erodes the ground and also supplies the geyser with particles that
fall back to the surface, downwind, and appear as the dark spring fans.
This explanation has been well accepted, but actually seeing a ground-erosion process that could eventually yield the spider shapes proved elusive.
Six years ago, researchers using HiRISE reported small furrows appearing
on sand dunes near Mars' north pole at sites where eruptions through dry
ice had deposited spring fans. However, those furrows in the far north disappear within a year, apparently refilled with sand.
The newly reported troughs near the south pole are also at spring-fan
sites. They have not only persisted and grown through three Mars years
so far, but they also formed branches as they extended. The branching
pattern resembles the spidery terrain.
"There are dunes where we see these dendritic [or branching] troughs in
the south, but in this area, there is less sand than around the north
pole," Portyankina said. "I think the sand is what jump starts the process
of carving a channel in the ground."
Harder ground lies beneath the sand. Forming a spider may require ground
soft enough to be carved, but not so loose that it refills the channels,
as in the north. The new research sheds light on how carbon dioxide shapes Mars in unearthly ways.
MRO began orbiting Mars in 2006. "The combination of very high-resolution imaging and the mission's longevity is enabling us to investigate active processes on Mars that produce detectable changes on time spans of seasons
or years," said MRO Deputy Project Scientist Leslie Tamppari of NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. "We keep getting surprises about how dynamic Mars is."
The University of Arizona, Tucson, operates HiRISE, which was built by
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. of Boulder. JPL, a division of Caltech
in Pasadena, California, manages the MRO Project for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built
the orbiter and collaborates with JPL to operate it. For additional information
about the project, visit:
http://mars.nasa.gov/mro
News Media Contact
Guy Webster
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-6278
guy.webster@jpl.nasa.gov
Alan Fischer
Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, Ariz.
520-382-0411
fischer@psi.edu
Laurie Cantillo / Dwayne Brown
NASA Headquarters, Washington
2202-358-1077 / 202-358-1726
laura.l.cantillo@nasa.gov /
dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov
2016-325
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