Radar map of buried Mars layers matches planet’s climate cycles
September 23rd, 2009 - 3:37 pm ICT by ANIWashington, September 23 (ANI): New, three-dimensional imaging of Martian north-polar ice layers by a radar instrument on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter matches with theoretical models of Martian climate swings during the past few million years.
Alignment of the layering patterns with the modeled climate cycles provides insight about how the layers accumulated.
These ice-rich, layered deposits cover an area one-third larger than Texas and form a stack up to 2 kilometers thick atop a basal deposit with additional ice.
“Contrast in electrical properties between layers is what provides the reflectivity we observe with the radar,” said Nathaniel Putzig of Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colorado, a member of the science team for the Shallow Radar instrument on the orbiter.
“The pattern of reflectivity tells us about the pattern of material variations within the layers,” he added.
Earlier radar observations indicated that the Martian north-polar layered deposits are mostly ice.
Radar contrasts between different layers in the deposits are interpreted as differences in the concentration of rock material, in the form of dust, mixed with the ice.
These deposits on Mars hold about one-third as much water as Earth’s Greenland ice sheet.
The radar results by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter provide a cross-sectional view of the north-polar layered deposits of Mars, showing that high-reflectivity zones, with multiple contrasting layers, alternate with more-homogenous zones of lower reflectivity.
Patterns of how these two types of zones alternate can be correlated to models of how changes in Mars’ tilt on its axis have produced changes in the planet’s climate in the past 4 million years or so, but only if some possibilities for how the layers form are ruled out.
“We’re not doing the climate modeling here; we are comparing others’ modeling results to what we observe with the radar, and using that comparison to constrain the possible explanations for how the layers form,” Putzig said.
The most recent 300,000 years of Martian history are a period of less dramatic swings in the planet’s tilt than during the preceding 600,000 years.
Since the top zone of the north-polar layered deposits - the most recently deposited portion — is strongly radar-reflective, the researchers propose that such sections of high-contrast layering correspond to periods of relatively small swings in the planet’s tilt. (ANI)
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Tags: boulder colorado, climate cycles, climate swings, contrasts, electrical properties, greenland ice sheet, martian climate, martian north, million years, nasa, polar ice, radar instrument, radar observations, reflectivity, rock material, science team, sectional view, southwest research institute, theoretical models, three dimensional imaging