Scientists believe giant impacts — like the one
depicted in this artist’s concept — occurred on Mars 4.5 billion years ago,
injecting debris from the impact deep into the planet’s mantle. NASA’s InSight
lander detected this debris before the mission’s end in 2022.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Rocky material that impacted Mars lies scattered in giant lumps throughout
the planet’s mantle, offering clues about Mars’ interior and its ancient past.
What appear to be fragments from
the aftermath of massive impacts on Mars that occurred 4.5 billion years ago
have been detected deep below the planet’s surface. The discovery was made
thanks to NASA’s now-retired InSight lander, which recorded the findings before
the mission’s end in 2022. The ancient impacts released enough energy to melt
continent-size swaths of the early crust and mantle into vast magma oceans,
simultaneously injecting the impactor fragments and Martian debris deep into
the planet’s interior.
There’s no way to tell exactly what
struck Mars: The early solar system was filled with a range of different rocky
objects that could have done so, including some so large they were effectively
protoplanets. The remains of these impacts still exist in the form of lumps
that are as large as 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) across and scattered throughout
the Martian mantle. They offer a record preserved only on worlds like Mars,
whose lack of tectonic plates has kept its interior from being churned up the
way Earth’s is through a process known as convection.
A cutaway view of Mars in this artist’s concept (not
to scale) reveals debris from ancient impacts scattered through the planet’s
mantle. On the surface at left, a meteoroid impact sends seismic signals
through the interior; at right is NASA’s InSight lander.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
The finding was reported Thursday, Aug. 28, in a study published by the journal Science.
“We’ve never seen the inside of a
planet in such fine detail and clarity before,” said the paper’s lead author,
Constantinos Charalambous of Imperial College London. “What we’re seeing is a
mantle studded with ancient fragments. Their survival to this day tells us
Mars’ mantle has evolved sluggishly over billions of years. On Earth, features
like these may well have been largely erased.”
InSight, which was managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California, placed the first seismometer on Mars’ surface in 2018. The extremely sensitive instrument recorded
1,319 marsquakes before the lander’s end of mission in 2022.
NASA’s InSight took this selfie in 2019 using a camera
on its robotic arm. The lander also used its arm to deploy the mission’s
seismometer, whose data was used in a 2025 study showing impacts left chunks of
debris deep in the planet’s interior.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Quakes produce seismic waves that change as they pass through different
kinds of material, providing scientists a way to study the interior of a planetary body. To date, the InSight team has measured the size,
depth, and composition of Mars’ crust, mantle, and core. This latest discovery regarding the mantle’s
composition suggests how much is still waiting to be discovered within
InSight’s data.
“We knew Mars was a time capsule
bearing records of its early formation, but we didn’t anticipate just how
clearly we’d be able to see with InSight,” said Tom Pike of Imperial College
London, coauthor of the paper.
Quake hunting
Mars lacks the tectonic plates that
produce the temblors many people in seismically active areas are familiar with.
But there are two other types of quakes on Earth that also occur on Mars: those
caused by rocks cracking under heat and pressure, and those caused by meteoroid
impacts.
Of the two types, meteoroid impacts
on Mars produce high-frequency seismic waves that travel from the crust deep
into the planet’s mantle, according to a paper published earlier this year in Geophysical Research Letters. Located
beneath the planet’s crust, the Martian mantle can be as much as 960 miles
(1,550 kilometers) thick and is made of solid rock that can reach temperatures
as high as 2,732 degrees Fahrenheit (1,500 degrees Celsius).
Scrambled
signals
The new Science paper identifies
eight marsquakes whose seismic waves contained strong, high-frequency energy
that reached deep into the mantle, where their seismic waves were distinctly
altered.
“When we first saw this in our
quake data, we thought the slowdowns were happening in the Martian crust,” Pike
said. “But then we noticed that the farther seismic waves travel through the
mantle, the more these high-frequency signals were being delayed.”
Using planetwide computer
simulations, the team saw that the slowing down and scrambling happened only
when the signals passed through small, localized regions within the mantle.
They also determined that these regions appear to be lumps of material with a
different composition than the surrounding mantle.
With one riddle solved, the team
focused on another: how those lumps got there.
Turning back the clock, they
concluded that the lumps likely arrived as giant asteroids or other rocky
material that struck Mars during the early solar system, generating those
oceans of magma as they drove deep into the mantle, bringing with them fragments
of crust and mantle.
Charalambous likens the pattern to
shattered glass — a few large shards with many smaller fragments. The pattern
is consistent with a large release of energy that scattered many fragments of
material throughout the mantle. It also fits well with current thinking that in
the early solar system, asteroids and other planetary bodies regularly
bombarded the young planets.
On Earth, the crust and uppermost
mantle is continuously recycled by plate tectonics pushing a plate’s edge into
the hot interior, where, through convection, hotter, less-dense material rises
and cooler, denser material sinks. Mars, by contrast, lacks tectonic plates,
and its interior circulates far more sluggishly. The fact that such fine
structures are still visible today, Charalambous said, “tells us Mars hasn’t
undergone the vigorous churning that would have smoothed out these lumps.”
And in that way, Mars could point
to what may be lurking beneath the surface of other rocky planets that lack
plate tectonics, including Venus and Mercury.
More about
InSight
JPL managed InSight for NASA’s
Science Mission Directorate. InSight was part of NASA’s Discovery Program,
managed by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
Lockheed Martin Space in Denver built the InSight spacecraft, including its
cruise stage and lander, and supported spacecraft operations for the mission.
A number of European partners, including France’s Centre National d’Études Spatiales (CNES) and the German Aerospace Center (DLR), supported the InSight mission. CNES provided the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure (SEIS) instrument to NASA, with the principal investigator at IPGP (Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris). Significant contributions for SEIS came from IPGP; the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany; the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) in Switzerland; Imperial College London and Oxford University in the United Kingdom; and JPL. DLR provided the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (HP3) instrument, with significant contributions from the Space Research Center (CBK) of the Polish Academy of Sciences and Astronika in Poland. Spain’s Centro de Astrobiología (CAB) supplied the temperature and wind sensors.
Source: NASA Marsquake Data Reveals Lumpy Nature of Red Planet’s Interior - NASA
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