Comparing Martian Ice Depths - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Comparing Martian Ice Depths

Description:

... mars orbiter laser altimeter (MOLA) digital elevation models, LPSC 31, #1619, 2000. ... Mars Express High Resolution Stereo Camera for a frozen sea close to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:87
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: K2128
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Comparing Martian Ice Depths


1
Comparing Martian Ice Depths
  • by Roozbeh Akhtari, Lucas Allen-Williams,
    Katherine Pearl, and Michael Reed

2
Question
  • Is the depth of ice underneath the surface of
    Mars in two areas similar in latitude
    (equatorial) and altitude (low) different?
  • The depth of ice in these areas is important
    because it tells us about Marss geological past
    and can give us hints towards finding past or
    present life on Mars.

3
Rampart Craters
  • Occur when meteorite strikes an area with
    underground ice or water that is shallow enough
    to affect the crater.
  • On Mars, we assume that what causes the rampart
    craters is ice.
  • The impact melts the ice, which forms a muddy
    slurry.
  • Slurry flows outwards from the crater.
  • When slurry stops, it creates a tall, bluff-like
    edge.

4
(No Transcript)
5
Mars and Water
  • Much evidence that a large amount of liquid water
    once existed on the surface of Mars.
  • The existence of large channels points to
    catastrophic floods that at one time released
    large amounts of water.
  • There remains the question of what happened to
    all the water, besides the water in the polar ice
    caps.
  • Many people think that the water is now in ice
    beneath the surface.
  • Older research says that ice is about 200m below
    the surface near the equator, and shallower the
    closer one gets to the poles.

6
New Research
  • Recent evidence shows that there may be ice much
    closer to the surface in equatorial regions that
    previously believed
  • Research with pack-ice and rampart craters finds
    volatiles 20-60m below the surface
  • If volatiles were ice, they probably would not
    disappear without leaving evidence of change.
  • Change not found, leading researchers to believe
    that there may be significant shallow ice
    reservoirs in these areas
  • There also may be liquid water with the ice

7
(No Transcript)
8
(No Transcript)
9
Chryse Planitia 24 craters measured Elysium
Planitia 22 craters measured
Elysium Planitia
10
Diameter in meters rim to rim
-Diameter is obtained by measuring craters using
THEMIS imaging data -Depth is obtained by
measuring craters using MOLA imaging data -By
comparing depth and diameter of rampart craters
and non-rampart craters, we can determine the
depth to ice -By looking at a non-rampart crater,
we can find a minimum ice depth for the time and
location of that specific crater
Depth in meters rim to bottom
11
Finding the diameter of a crater
  • Find a THEMIS image of the crater
  • Open image in Canvas
  • Set pixel aspect ratio to the resolution of the
    THEMIS image
  • -Draw a line across the diameter of the crater
    from one rim to the other
  • -Measure the line using the object specs feature

9424 m
12
Finding the depth of a crater
-Find the crater in Gridview using the MOLA
data -Take a profile of the crater -To find the
depth, measure the difference between the highest
point of the rim and the lowest point on the
bottom of the crater
-1475
925 m
-2400
13
RESULTS
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Superimposed Graphs of Chryse Planitia and
Elysium Planitia
17
What Does This Show?
  • The average crater depths for both Chryse
    Planitia and Elysium Planitia are relatively
    equal and consistent, although there is variation
    within each group.
  • Virtually all of the crater depths are larger
    than the global trendline values.
  • Overlapping diameter / depth zones of rampart and
    non-rampart craters ? variation in ice depth over
    time?

18
Possible Explanations for Unusual Depth of Craters
  • 1)Global trendline craters are old and filled in
    with sediment
  • 2)Our craters were from ice-rich areas ? weaker ?
    impacts blew out more material
  • Consequences of Explanations
  • 1) Ice-influence ? cant use global predictions
  • 2) Fill-in ? can use global ice-depth predictions
    because their craters formed similarly to ours
  • Ways to test
  • We observed pack ice formations in Western
    Chryse Planitia, and hypothesize that the ice
    should be shallower there. If that is true, then
    there should be more of an ice-influenced depth
    effect there. This is the Geographic Variation
    test.
  • Look at unusually deep and unusually shallow
    craters and look for evidence of erosion or
    sediment deposition.

19
Geographic Variation?
  • Is the difference from the global trendline
    uniform?
  • Used Latitude Longitude
  • R-squared value shows how big of an effect the
    latitude or longitude had on depth.

20
Is Everywhere in Elysium Planitia the Same?
21
How about in Chryse Planitia?
22
Location-Depth Relationship
  • Total R-squared for each approx. 20 ?
    geography has a small effect, but its far from
    complete
  • Craters relatively deeper in Eastern Elysium
    Planitia and Northern Chryse Planitia
  • Chryse Planitia results are not the expected
    results ? no evidence for ice influencing crater
    depth
  • Somewhat small R-squared ? its not too bad an
    approximation to say that each sample is
    internally uniform

23
Are the craters filled in?
  • A look at some of the craters with the highest
    and lowest deviation from the expected depth says
    yes
  • Looked at the shallowest and deepest craters from
    Elysium Planitia (EP) and Chryse Planitia (CP)

24
EP Crater 22 is unusually shallow
25
as is CP Crater 10
26
While EP Crater 3 is unusually deep...
27
However, CP Crater 3 is also unusually deep
28
Sediment Fill Seems Likely
  • Shallower ? filled in (old)
  • Deeper ? fresh (new)
  • Hypothesis our craters are fresher than the
    national average, which is why they are deep.
  • We dont have evidence for ice influencing the
    crater explosion, but the rampart crater
    morphology group (see Pomona Geology website) has
    looked into it and found some.

29
Conclusions
  • Assuming fill-in is the only factor changing our
    results, we can use a global ice depth prediction
    (using diameter, which should not be changed by
    sediment fill)
  • Bounds on ice depth variation over time (smallest
    rampart craters to largest non-rampart craters)
  • CP Ice was as shallow as 46 m at one point and
    as deep as 60 m at another
  • EP Ice was as shallow as 74 m and as deep as 123
    m at another
  • These bounds do not intersect, so the two
    locations are significantly different.
  • Ice was about 2x as deep at Elysium Planitia!

30
THE END
  • The answer to our question is, to put it simply,
  • Yes.
  • Sources
  • Barlow N. G., J. Koroshetz, and J. M. Dohm
    (2001). Variations in the onset diameter for
    Martian layered ejecta morphologies and their
    implications for subsurface volatile reservoirs.
    Geophys. Res. Lett., 28, 3095-3098.
  • Demura, Hirohide, and Kei Kurita. A shallow
    volatile layer at Chryse Planitia, Mars. Earth
    Planets Space, Vol. 50, pp.423-429. 1998.
  • Barlow, N. G. and C. B. Perez (2003). Martian
    impact crater ejecta morphologies as indicators
    of the distribution of subsurface volatiles, J.
    Geophys. Res., 108, 10.1029/2002JE002036.
  • Garvin, J.B., J.J. Frawley, S.E.H. Sakimoto, and
    C. Schnetzler, Global geometric properties of
    martian impact craters an assessment from mars
    orbiter laser altimeter (MOLA) digital elevation
    models, LPSC 31, 1619, 2000.
  • Hartmann, William K. A Travelers Guide to Mars.
    Workman Publishing New York, NY 2003.
  • Helgason, J. On the Present Martian Water-Ice
    Reservoir in Equatorial Mars. International
    Conference on Mars Polar Science and Exploration,
    p. 73. 08/2000
  • Murray, John B., et al. Evidence from the Mars
    Express High Resolution Stereo Camera for a
    frozen sea close to Mars equator. Nature, Vol
    434 17 March 2005, p.352-356.
  • Polit, Anjani T. Rampart Cratering in a
    Subsection of the Tharsis Region. Grosfils
    Research Letters, Vol.2, pp.33-36. Claremont,
    CA May, 2001.
  • Reiss, D. et al. Ages of Rampart Craters in
    the Xanthe Terra Region and Southern Chryse
    Planitia, Mars Implications for the Distribution
    of Ground Ice in Equatorial Regions. Lunar and
    Planetary Science Conference XXXVI (2005).
    www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2005/pdf/1725.pdf
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com