This graphs shows the latitudinal distribution of humidity in Mars' atmosphere during the year according to data collected by the SPICAMInfrared instruments. |
Russian scientists from the Space Research Institute of the Russian
Academy of Sciences and the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology
(MIPT), together with their French and American colleagues, have created
a 'map' of the distribution of water vapour in Mars' atmosphere. Their
research includes observations of seasonal variations in atmospheric
concentrations using data collected over ten years by the Russian-French
SPICAM spectrometer aboard the Mars Express orbiter. This is the
longest period of observation and provides the largest volume of data
about water vapour on Mars.
The first SPICAM (Spectroscopy for Investigation of Characteristics
of the Atmosphere of Mars) instrument was built for the Russian Martian
orbiter Mars 96, which was lost due to an accident in the rocket
launcher.
The new updated version of the instrument was built with the
participation of the Space Research Institute as part of the agreement
between RosCosmos and the French space agency CNES for the Mars Express
orbiter. The apparatus was launched on June 2, 2003 from the Baikonur
Cosmodrome using a Russian Soyuz rocket launcher with a Fregat
propulsion stage. At the end of December 2003, Mars Express entered a
near-Mars orbit and since then has been operating successfully,
collecting data on the planet and its surroundings.
Staff of the Space Research Institute and MIPT, including Alexander
Trokhimovsky, Anna Fyodorova, Oleg Korablyov and Alexander Rodin,
together with their colleagues from the French laboratory LATMOS and
NASA's Goddard Center, have analysed a mass of data obtained by
observing water vapour in Mars' atmosphere using an infrared
spectrometer that is part of the SPICAM instrument over a period of five
Martian years (about 10 Earth years as a year on Mars is equal to 1.88
Earth years).
Conditions on Mars -- low temperatures and low atmospheric pressure
-- do not allow water to exist in liquid form in open reservoirs as it
would on Earth. However, on Mars, there is a powerful layer of
permafrost, with large reserves of frozen water concentrated at the
polar caps. There is water vapour in the atmosphere, although at very
low levels compared to the quantities experienced hereon Earth. If the
entire volume of water in the atmosphere was to be spread evenly over
the surface of the planet, the thickness of the water layer would not
exceed 10-20 microns, while on Earth such a layer would be thousands of
times thicker.
Data from the SPICAM experiment has allowed scientists to create a
picture of the annual cycle of water vapour concentration variation in
the atmosphere. Scientists have been observing the atmosphere during
missions to Mars since the end of the 1970s in order to make the picture
more precise, as well as traceits variability.
The content of water vapour in the atmosphere reaches a maximum level
of 60-70 microns of released water in the northern regions during the
summer season. The summer maximum in the southern hemisphere is
significantly lower -- about 20 microns. The scientists have also
established a significant, by 5-10 microns, reduction in the
concentration of water vapour during global sandstorms, which is
probably connected to the removal of water vapour from the atmosphere
due to adsorption processes and condensation on surfaces.
"This research, based on one of the longest periods of monitoring of
the Martian climate, has made an important contribution to the
understanding of the Martian hydrological cycle -- the most important of
the climate mechanisms which could potentially support the existence of
biological activity on the planet," said co-author of the research
Alexander Rodin, deputy head of the Infrared Spectroscopy of Planetary
Atmospheres Laboratory at MIPT and senior scientific researcher at the
Space Research Institute.
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