Credit: NASA
Scientists
have discovered that Mars has an interior structure similar to Earth's. Results
from NASA's InSight mission suggest that the red planet has a solid inner
core surrounded by a liquid outer core, potentially resolving a longstanding
mystery.
The findings, which are published in Nature,
have important implications for our understanding of how Mars evolved. Billions
of years ago, the planet may have had a thicker atmosphere that allowed liquid water to flow on the surface.
This thicker atmosphere may have been
kept in place by a protective magnetic field, like the one Earth has. However,
Mars lacks such a field today. Scientists have wondered whether the loss of
this magnetic field led to the red planet losing its atmosphere to space over time and
becoming the cold, dry desert it is today.
A key property of Earth is that its core
has a solid center and liquid outer core. Convection within the liquid layer creates a dynamo,
producing the magnetic field. The field deflects charged particles ejected by
the sun, preventing them from stripping Earth's atmosphere away over time and
leading to the habitable conditions we know and enjoy.
From residual magnetization in the
crust, we think that Mars did once have a magnetic field, possibly from a core
structure similar to that of Earth. However, scientists think that the core
must have cooled and stopped moving at some point in its history.
On the surface of Mars there is a
tremendous amount of evidence that liquid water once flowed, suggesting more
hospitable conditions in the past. The evidence comes in many forms, including
dry lake beds with minerals that formed under water, or the dramatic valley
networks carved by rivers and streams. However, the Martian atmosphere is thin
today and the necessary amount of water is nowhere to be found.
Teams working with the seismometers on
NASA's InSight Mars lander first identified the Martian core and determined that it was
actually still liquid. Now, the new results from Huixing Bi, at the University
of Science and Technology of China in Hefei and colleagues, show that there may
also be a solid layer inside the liquid core.
The nature of the interior structure of
Mars has been an intriguing mystery. Was it ever like Earth's, with a dynamic
liquid layer around a solid center? Or did Mars' smaller size prevent such a
formation? How big must a planet be to gain the protection of a magnetic field,
like Earth's, and support a habitable climate?
To understand what happened, how Mars
evolved, we need to understand Mars today. These questions about Mars'
atmosphere, water, and core have motivated several high profile Mars missions.
While the NASA Mars rovers, Spirit, Opportunity, Curiosity, and Perseverance have studied the surface mineralogy, the
European Space Agency's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter is studying the water cycle, NASA's Maven spacecraft is studying atmospheric loss to space, and
NASA's InSight lander was sent to study seismic activity.
In 2021, Simon Stähler, from ETH
Zurich in Switzerland, and colleagues, published a seminal paper from the InSight mission. In it, they presented
an analysis of the way that seismic waves pass through Mars from Mars quakes in
the vicinity of InSight, through the mantle, through the core, and then
reflecting off the other side of the planet and reaching InSight.
They detected evidence of the core
for the first time and were able to constrain its size and density. They
modeled a core with a single liquid layer that was both larger and less dense
than expected and without a solid inner core. The size was huge, about half of
Mars' radius of 1,800 km, and the low density implied that it was full of
lighter elements. The light elements, such as carbon, sulfur, and hydrogen,
change the core's melt temperature and affect how it could crystallize over
time, making it more likely to remain liquid.
The solid inner core (610 km
radius) found by Huixing Bi and colleagues is hugely significant. The very
presence of a solid inner core shows that crystallization and solidification is
taking place as the planet cools over time.
The core structure is more like
Earth's and therefore more likely to have produced a dynamo at some point. On
Earth, it is the thermal (heat) changes between the solid inner core, the
liquid layer, and the mantle that drive convection in the liquid layer and
create the dynamo that leads to a magnetic field. This result makes it more
likely that a dynamo on Mars was possible in the past.
With Simon Stähler and co-authors
reporting a fully liquid core and Huixing Bi and colleagues reporting a solid
inner core, it might seem as if there will be some controversy. But that is not
the case. This is an excellent example of progress in scientific data
collection and analysis.
Competing models of Mars
InSight landed in November 2018 and
its last contact with Earth occurred in December 2022. With Stähler publishing
in 2021, there is some new data from InSight to look at. Stähler's model was revised in 2023 by Henri Samuel, from the Université
Paris Cité, and colleagues. A revised core size and density helped reconcile
the InSight results with some other pieces of evidence.
In Stähler's paper, a solid inner core is specifically not ruled out. The authors state that the signal
strength of the analyzed data was not strong enough to be used to identify
seismic waves crossing an inner core boundary. This was an excellent first
measurement of the core of Mars, but it left the question of additional layers
and structure open.
For the latest study in Nature, the scientists achieved their result through a
careful selection of specific seismic event types, at a certain distance from
InSight. They also employ some novel data analysis techniques to get a weak
signal out of the instrument noise.
This result is sure to have an
impact within the community, and it will be very interesting to see whether
additional re-analyses of the InSight data support or reject their model. A
thorough discussion of the broader geological context and whether the model
fits other available data that constrain the core size and density fit will
also follow.
Understanding the interior structure of planets in our solar system is critical to developing ideas about how they form, grow, and evolve. Prior to InSight, models for Mars that were similar to Earth were investigated, but were certainly not favored.
Source: Mars has a solid core, resolving a longstanding planetary mystery, according to new study
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