Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (5,001)
  • Business (312)
  • Career (4,241)
  • Climate (212)
  • Culture (4,208)
  • Education (4,424)
  • Finance (202)
  • Health (853)
  • Lifestyle (4,097)
  • Science (4,112)
  • Sports (311)
  • Tech (174)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

Novartis Avidity Biosciences in talks

October 26, 2025

Just one bite from this insect can make you allergic to meat for life

October 26, 2025

Orion Spacecraft Completes Major Stacking Milestone Ahead of Artemis II Mission

October 26, 2025

Networking opportunities await at UAFS All-Majors Career Fair

October 26, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    Novartis Avidity Biosciences in talks

    October 26, 2025

    Jets legend Nick Mangold dead after complications with kidney disease

    October 26, 2025

    A Pakistan foreign policy renaissance? Not quite | Politics

    October 26, 2025

    Top Wall Street analysts champion these 3 stocks for solid returns

    October 26, 2025

    Bill Maher highlights Christian persecution crisis in Nigeria on his show

    October 26, 2025
  • Business

    Google Business Profile New Report Negative Review Extortion Scams

    October 23, 2025

    Land Topic is Everybody’s Business

    October 20, 2025

    Global Topic: Air India selects Panasonic Avionics’ Astrova for 34 widebody aircraft | Business Solutions | Products & Solutions | Topics

    October 19, 2025

    Business Engagement | IUCN

    October 14, 2025

    10 ways artificial intelligence is transforming operations management | IBM

    October 11, 2025
  • Career

    Networking opportunities await at UAFS All-Majors Career Fair

    October 26, 2025

    ‘Aviation has a place for you’: Families explore career paths amid Triad’s aviation boom

    October 26, 2025

    Carlos Yulo wins second career vaulting gold

    October 26, 2025

    Kyshawn George News: Pours in career-high 34 in Dallas

    October 26, 2025

    SRU student advances career through Westinghouse internship   – SRU News

    October 26, 2025
  • Sports

    Bye Week Off-Topic Thread – Yahoo Sports

    October 25, 2025

    This Thunder Rookie Guard Benefits from the Nikola Topic Injury

    October 23, 2025

    South Bend Topic Sports-betting | WSBT 22: News, Weather and Sports for Michiana

    October 21, 2025

    John Tesh’s iconic ‘Roundball Rock’ theme returns for NBA on NBC

    October 21, 2025

    YahooSergio Scariolo touched on the topic of European …Sergio Scariolo touched on the topic of European basketball and the NBA Europe project. “We don't have enough information..2 days ago

    October 21, 2025
  • Climate

    important environmental topics 2024| Statista

    October 21, 2025

    World BankDevelopment TopicsProvide sustainable food systems, water, and economies for healthy people and a healthy planet. Agriculture · Agribusiness and Value Chains · Climate-Smart….2 days ago

    October 20, 2025

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    October 17, 2025

    World Bank Group and the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution Process

    October 14, 2025

    GEI Target Rules 2025 and Carbon Market

    October 10, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    It is a hot topic as Grok and DeepSeek overwhelmed big tech AI models such as ChatGPT and Gemini in ..

    October 24, 2025

    Countdown to the Tech.eu Summit London 2025: Key Topics, Speakers, and Opportunities

    October 23, 2025

    The High-Tech Agenda of the German government

    October 20, 2025

    Texas Tech Universities Ban Teaching About Transgender and Other Gender Topics

    October 19, 2025

    Orion Spacecraft Completes Major Stacking Milestone Ahead of Artemis II Mission

    October 26, 2025

    How To Grab A Final Chance To See The Comet On Saturday Night

    October 26, 2025

    A doomed planet is being torn up by its ‘zombie’ white dwarf star — but astronomers don’t understand why

    October 26, 2025

    66-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Mummies Reveal Some Dinosaurs Had Hooves

    October 26, 2025
  • Culture

    First, came the Louvre heist. Then came the memes

    October 26, 2025

    Jeff Minick: ‘The canary in the coal mine of culture

    October 26, 2025

    San Francisco Chinese Culture Center, oldest of its kind in the nation, celebrates new permanent home in Chinatown

    October 26, 2025

    Congolese refugees grow crops and community in South Scranton

    October 26, 2025

    How FBI’s gambling case highlights Mafia’s changing tactics

    October 26, 2025
  • Health

    Hampton: Community Encouraged To Attend November Los Alamos County Health Council Meeting

    October 24, 2025

    Health Insurance vs. Nuclear Weapons

    October 23, 2025

    Health Care Coverage For Seniors Topic Of West Hartford Forum

    October 20, 2025

    Mental health & finance topic for women @Bromley conference

    October 17, 2025

    Mental health & finance topic for women @Bromley conference

    October 17, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Science»Mars leaks faster when closer to the sun
Science

Mars leaks faster when closer to the sun

September 8, 2024No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Tbpsrybdo9jnjqm8k4vs84 1200 80.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Seasonal changes can have a dramatic effect on how quickly Mars loses its water to space, a joint study between the Hubble Space Telescope and NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission has shown.

Over three billion years ago, Mars was warm and wet, with large bodies of water on its surface and a thicker atmosphere. Today, however, Mars is desolate, cold and dry. So, what happened to all the water?

“There’s only two places water can go,” John Clarke of the University of Boston said in a statement. “It can freeze into the ground, or the water molecules can break into atoms, and the atoms can escape from the top of the atmosphere into space.”

Plenty of Mars’ water is still on the Red Planet. Vast reservoirs appear to be locked up deep underground at depths between 11.5 and 20 kilometers (7.1 and 12.4 miles). There’s enough water inside Mars for a global equivalent layer (GEL, which essentially refers to how deep a planet-wide ocean it would create) between 1 and 2 kilometers (0.62 and 1.24 miles).

Related: Mars rock samples show signs of water in Jezero Crater — could life have once existed there?

Relatively small amounts of water-ice are also locked up in shallow permafrost and in Mars’ polar ice caps. During the Martian summer, this ice can sublimate, dumping water vapor into the atmosphere. Most of that water vapor circulates from pole to pole, freezing out in the hemisphere in which it is winter, but some finds itself in the upper atmosphere where solar ultraviolet light can photodissociate H2O water molecules, breaking them apart into their component atoms. The oxygen in water ends up either oxidizing materials on the surface (hence, why Mars appears rust-red) or bonding with carbon to form carbon dioxide. Meanwhile, the hydrogen atoms (or their heavier isotopic counterpart, deuterium) can escape into space (if they are energetic enough to reach escape velocity) and get carried away with the solar wind.

MAVEN, which arrived at Mars in 2014, is tasked with measuring this hydrogen escape. 

Breaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more!

A side by side of a very glowy-looking and grainy Mars with different thicknesses of reddish gradient around it.

Comparing the thickness of Mars’ atmosphere and its water loss at perihelion to aphelion, in these Hubble Space Telescope images of the Red Planet.  (Image credit: NASA/ESA/STScI/John T. Clarke (Boston University).)

Because deuterium, a heavy form of hydrogen, doesn’t escape Mars’ atmosphere so easily, it means that the ratio of deuterium to hydrogen (D/H) in Mars’ atmosphere is key, with the abundance of deuterium relative to hydrogen growing over time as it loses hydrogen faster. As Earth and Mars are presumed to have acquired their water from the same sources, the primordial D/H ratio of water on Mars 3 billion to 4 billion years ago should have been the same as it is on Earth today. The D/H ratio on Mars today is somewhere between 8 and 10 times larger than on Earth. There are certain ambiguities in the measurements, but by comparing that primordial Mars water ratio to today’s ratio while factoring in the rate of hydrogen and deuterium loss to space, it is possible to extrapolate backwards and calculate how much water Mars likely  lost over its history.

Based on MAVEN’s previous observations, Mars has lost enough water to space to form a GEL of between tens and hundreds of meters deep. Combined with the huge amount of water recently found buried inside Mars, this implies the Red Planet was water-rich in its distant past.

However, MAVEN, with the Hubble Space Telescope’s help, has now found some unanticipated complexity to the story of Mars’ water loss. Together, the instruments have shown that the rate of hydrogen loss is seasonal, with large increases in the escape rate at perihelion, which is Mars’ closest point in its orbit around the sun. This coincides with a strong upwelling of water vapor into the middle atmosphere, caused by seasonal heating. When at perihelion, Mars’ southern hemisphere is tilted towards the sun and the Red Planet is engulfed in its annual dust storm season; the airborne dust can contribute to atmospheric heating and water vapor content.

At perihelion, MAVEN measured densities of deuterium and hydrogen in the upper atmosphere that are respectively about 5 and 20 times higher than at aphelion, which is Mars’ farthest point from the sun in its elliptical (elongated, rather than circular) orbit. At aphelion, the deuterium loss is so feeble that MAVEN is not even sensitive enough to detect it. This is where the Hubble Space Telescope has to come in, filling in the blanks. The observations also showed that the escape rates are 10 to 100 times higher for deuterium and hydrogen respectively at perihelion than at aphelion. Indeed, both deuterium and hydrogen are escaping so rapidly at perihelion that the only thing limiting them is the amount of water vapor available in the atmosphere.

“In recent years scientists have found that Mars has an annual cycle that is much more dynamic than people expected 10 or 15 years ago,” said Clarke. “The whole atmosphere is very turbulent, heating up and cooling down on short timescales, even down to hours. The atmosphere expands and contracts as the brightness of the sun at Mars varies by 40% over the course of a Martian year.”

This does set up a conundrum when explaining the deuterium loss, which appears greater than what would be expected purely from ordinary thermal escape, where a deuterium atom is warm enough to have the energy needed to skip into space. To increase the rate of deuterium loss so that it matches the observed D/H ratio on Mars, an extra injection of energy into the atmosphere is required from somewhere. This could come from protons on the solar wind entering the atmosphere and colliding with deuterium atoms, or chemical reactions from solar ultraviolet light that can give the deuterium an extra kick.

The findings were published on July 26 in the journal Science Advances. 

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Orion Spacecraft Completes Major Stacking Milestone Ahead of Artemis II Mission

October 26, 2025

How To Grab A Final Chance To See The Comet On Saturday Night

October 26, 2025

A doomed planet is being torn up by its ‘zombie’ white dwarf star — but astronomers don’t understand why

October 26, 2025

66-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Mummies Reveal Some Dinosaurs Had Hooves

October 26, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

Novartis Avidity Biosciences in talks

October 26, 2025

Just one bite from this insect can make you allergic to meat for life

October 26, 2025

Orion Spacecraft Completes Major Stacking Milestone Ahead of Artemis II Mission

October 26, 2025

Networking opportunities await at UAFS All-Majors Career Fair

October 26, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (5,001)
  • Business (312)
  • Career (4,241)
  • Climate (212)
  • Culture (4,208)
  • Education (4,424)
  • Finance (202)
  • Health (853)
  • Lifestyle (4,097)
  • Science (4,112)
  • Sports (311)
  • Tech (174)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (5,001)
  • Business (312)
  • Career (4,241)
  • Climate (212)
  • Culture (4,208)
  • Education (4,424)
  • Finance (202)
  • Health (853)
  • Lifestyle (4,097)
  • Science (4,112)
  • Sports (311)
  • Tech (174)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.