The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars

Abstract Observations of recurring slope lineae (RSL) from the High‐Resolution Imaging Science Experiment have been interpreted as present‐day, seasonally variable liquid water flows; however, orbital spectroscopy has not confirmed the presence of liquid H2O, only hydrated salts. Thermal Emission Im...

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Main Authors: Christopher S. Edwards, Sylvain Piqueux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2016-09-01
Series:Geophysical Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GL070179
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author Christopher S. Edwards
Sylvain Piqueux
author_facet Christopher S. Edwards
Sylvain Piqueux
author_sort Christopher S. Edwards
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Observations of recurring slope lineae (RSL) from the High‐Resolution Imaging Science Experiment have been interpreted as present‐day, seasonally variable liquid water flows; however, orbital spectroscopy has not confirmed the presence of liquid H2O, only hydrated salts. Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) temperature data and a numerical heat transfer model definitively constrain the amount of water associated with RSL. Surface temperature differences between RSL‐bearing and dry RSL‐free terrains are consistent with no water associated with RSL and, based on measurement uncertainties, limit the water content of RSL to at most 0.5–3 wt %. In addition, distinct high thermal inertia regolith signatures expected with crust‐forming evaporitic salt deposits from cyclical briny water flows are not observed, indicating low water salinity (if any) and/or low enough volumes to prevent their formation. Alternatively, observed salts may be preexisting in soils at low abundances (i.e., near or below detection limits) and largely immobile. These RSL‐rich surfaces experience ~100 K diurnal temperature oscillations, possible freeze/thaw cycles and/or complete evaporation on time scales that challenge their habitability potential. The unique surface temperature measurements provided by THEMIS are consistent with a dry RSL hypothesis or at least significantly limit the water content of Martian RSL.
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spelling doaj-art-cf107a42de8c405cbe062d62efb1f5762025-08-20T01:52:04ZengWileyGeophysical Research Letters0094-82761944-80072016-09-0143178912891910.1002/2016GL070179The water content of recurring slope lineae on MarsChristopher S. Edwards0Sylvain Piqueux1Astrogeology Science Center U. S. Geological Survey Flagstaff Arizona USAJet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena California USAAbstract Observations of recurring slope lineae (RSL) from the High‐Resolution Imaging Science Experiment have been interpreted as present‐day, seasonally variable liquid water flows; however, orbital spectroscopy has not confirmed the presence of liquid H2O, only hydrated salts. Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) temperature data and a numerical heat transfer model definitively constrain the amount of water associated with RSL. Surface temperature differences between RSL‐bearing and dry RSL‐free terrains are consistent with no water associated with RSL and, based on measurement uncertainties, limit the water content of RSL to at most 0.5–3 wt %. In addition, distinct high thermal inertia regolith signatures expected with crust‐forming evaporitic salt deposits from cyclical briny water flows are not observed, indicating low water salinity (if any) and/or low enough volumes to prevent their formation. Alternatively, observed salts may be preexisting in soils at low abundances (i.e., near or below detection limits) and largely immobile. These RSL‐rich surfaces experience ~100 K diurnal temperature oscillations, possible freeze/thaw cycles and/or complete evaporation on time scales that challenge their habitability potential. The unique surface temperature measurements provided by THEMIS are consistent with a dry RSL hypothesis or at least significantly limit the water content of Martian RSL.https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GL070179Marsrecurring slope lineaewater budgetTHEMISthermophysics
spellingShingle Christopher S. Edwards
Sylvain Piqueux
The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars
Geophysical Research Letters
Mars
recurring slope lineae
water budget
THEMIS
thermophysics
title The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars
title_full The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars
title_fullStr The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars
title_full_unstemmed The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars
title_short The water content of recurring slope lineae on Mars
title_sort water content of recurring slope lineae on mars
topic Mars
recurring slope lineae
water budget
THEMIS
thermophysics
url https://doi.org/10.1002/2016GL070179
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