Sand dunes in Northern Mars actively changing
February 4th, 2011 - 2:32 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 4 (ANI): An investigation led by a Planetary Science Institute researcher has revealed that the avalanche faces of huge Martian sand dunes, long thought to be frozen in time on the distant planet, are being re-sculpted on a seasonal basis.
Candice Hansen, a senior scientist at PSI and lead author of a paper, said that the vast northern dunes on Mars - covering an area larger than Texas at 845,000 square kilometers - were believed by planetary scientists to be fairly static, shaped long ago when winds on the planet’s surface were much stronger than seen today.
New images from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera aboard NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter tell a different story.
“Many dunes in the northern polar region of Mars have shown substantial changes in morphology within just one Martian year,” said Hansen, who also serves as deputy principal investigator on the HiRISE team.
A seasonal layer of frozen carbon dioxide, or dry ice, that blankets the region in winter and sublimates, or changes from solid to gasstate, in the spring is responsible for the annual erosion of the polar Martian dunes, Hansen said.
“This gas flow destabilizes the sand, causing avalanches and creating new alcoves, gullies and sand aprons on Martian dunes,” she said.
Comparing images from the HiRISE camera taken over two Mars years — about four Earth years — the team led by Hansen discovered that the dunes they studied at high latitudes showed changes indicating that they are not strongly crusted or ice cemented, as previously assumed by Mars scientists.
“The level of erosion in just one Mars year was really astonishing,” Hansen said. “In some places hundreds of cubic yards of sand have avalanched down the face of the dunes.”
The study appears in the journal Science. (ANI)
- Trees on Mars? - Jan 13, 2010
- Frozen piles of CO2 on Mars may trigger avalanches - Oct 30, 2010
- Scientists find signs of flowing water on Mars - Aug 05, 2011
- Carbon dioxide frost consigns Phoenix Mars Lander to history - May 25, 2010
- NASA spacecraft detects significant changes in Mars' atmosphere - Apr 22, 2011
- New find points toward habitable environments deep in Martian crust - Oct 12, 2010
- Rare Polar Martian impact craters revealed - Oct 16, 2008
- Scientists spot earth-like snowy avalanches near Mars north pole - Nov 08, 2008
- 99 percent pure water ice found on Mars - Sep 25, 2009
- Factors other than trapped ice limit dune movement on Mars - Jul 08, 2009
- NASA's Mars Orbiter completes 5-yr mark - Mar 10, 2011
- NASA, Microsoft collaborate to 'bring Mars to life' - Jul 13, 2010
- Gullies on Mars show water ran on Red Planet as early as 1.25 mln yrs ago - Mar 03, 2009
- Mahatma Gandhi's face seen on Mars! - Jun 13, 2011
- HiRISE camera captures high-resolution 3D images of Mars - Dec 09, 2008
Tags: alcoves, distant planet, frozen carbon dioxide, high latitudes, high resolution imaging, high resolution imaging science experiment, imaging science, institute researcher, journal science, mars scientists, martian sand dunes, martian year, northern dunes, northern mars, northern polar region, planetary science institute, planetary scientists, seasonal basis, square kilometers, sublimates