SETI bioastro: Fw: Odyssey Studies Changing Weather and Climate on Mars

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Mon Dec 08 2003 - 11:20:44 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 12:34 PM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: Odyssey Studies Changing Weather and Climate on Mars

    MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
    JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
    CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
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    Guy Webster, (818) 354-6278
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

    Donald Savage (202) 358-1727
    NASA Headquarters, Washington

    RELEASE: 2003-165 December 8, 2003

    ODYSSEY STUDIES CHANGING WEATHER AND CLIMATE ON MARS

    Mars may be going through a period of climate change, new findings
    from NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter suggest.

    Odyssey has been mapping the distribution of materials on and near
    Mars' surface since early 2002, nearly a full annual cycle on Mars.
    Besides tracking seasonal changes, such as the advance and retreat of
    polar dry ice, the orbiter is returning evidence useful for learning
    about longer-term dynamics.

    The amount of frozen water near the surface in some relatively warm
    low-latitude regions on both sides of Mars' equator appears too great
    to be in equilibrium with the atmosphere under current climatic
    conditions, said Dr. William Feldman of Los Alamos National
    Laboratory, N.M. He is the lead scientist for an Odyssey instrument
    that assesses water content indirectly through measurements of neutron
    emissions.

    "One explanation could be that Mars is just coming out of an ice age,"
    Feldman said. "In some low-latitude areas, the ice has already
    dissipated. In others, that process is slower and hasn't reached an
    equilibrium yet. Those areas are like the patches of snow you
    sometimes see persisting in protected spots long after the last
    snowfall of the winter."

    Frozen water makes up as much as 10 percent of the top meter (three
    feet) of surface material in some regions close to the equator. Dust
    deposits may be covering and insulating the lingering ice, Feldman
    said. He and other Odyssey scientists described their recent findings
    today at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San
    Francisco.

    "Odyssey is giving us indications of recent global climate change in
    Mars," said Dr. Jeffrey Plaut, project scientist for the mission at
    NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

    High latitude regions of Mars have layers with differing ice content
    within the top half meter (20 inches) or so of the surface,
    researchers conclude from mapping of hydrogen abundance based on
    gamma-ray emissions.

    "A model that fits the data has three layers near the surface," said
    Dr. William Boynton of the University of Arizona, Tucson, team leader
    for the gamma-ray spectrometer instrument on Odyssey. "The very top
    layer would be dry, with no ice. The next layer would contain ice in
    the pore spaces between grains of soil. Beneath that would be a very
    ice-rich layer, 60 to nearly 100 percent water ice."

    Boynton interprets the iciest layer as a deposit of snow or frost,
    mixed with a little windblown dust, from a cold-climate era. The
    middle layer could be the result of changes brought in a warmer era:
    The ice down to a certain depth dissipates into the atmosphere. The
    dust left behind collapses into a soil layer with limited pore space
    for returning ice.

    Information from the gamma-ray spectrometer alone is not enough to
    tell how recently the climate changed from colder to warmer, but an
    estimated range might come from collaborations with climate modelers,
    Boynton said.

    Other Odyssey instruments are providing other pieces of the puzzle.
    Images from the orbiter's camera system have been combined into the
    highest resolution complete map ever made of Mars' south polar region.
    "We can now accurately count craters in the layered materials of the
    polar regions to get an idea how old they are," said Dr. Phil
    Christensen of Arizona State University, Tempe, principal investigator
    for the camera system.

    Temperature information from the camera system's infrared imaging has
    produced a surprise about dark patches that dot bright expanses of
    seasonal carbon-dioxide ice. "Those dark features look like places
    where the ice has gone away, but thermal infrared maps show that even
    the dark areas have temperatures so low they must be carbon-dioxide
    ice." Christensen said. "One possibility is that the ice is clear in
    these areas and we're seeing down through the ice to features
    underneath."

    Odyssey's high-energy neutron detector continues to monitor seasonal
    changes in the amount of carbon-dioxide ice deposited in polar
    regions, allowing tests of atmosphere-circulation models, said Dr.
    Igor Mitrofanov of the Institute for Space Research, Moscow, Russia.

    Measurements by an instrument for monitoring the radiation environment
    at Mars show the level of radiation hazard that Mars-bound astronauts
    might face, including levels during a period of unusually intense
    solar activity, said Dr. Cary Zeitlin of the National Space Biomedical
    Research Institute, Houston.

    JPL manages Mars Odyssey for NASA's Office of Space Science,
    Washington. Investigators at Arizona State University, Tempe;
    University of Arizona, Tucson; NASA's Johnson Space Center, Houston;
    the Russian Aviation and Space Agency, Moscow; and Los Alamos National
    Laboratory, Los Alamos, N.M., built and operate Odyssey science
    instruments. Information about the mission is available on the
    Internet at: http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/odyssey.

    -end-


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