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    Mystery of Mars Gullies Solved

    Gullies crisscrossing the Martian poles could be formed by carbon dioxide rather than by liquid water, a new study finds.

    Using calculations taken from industrial applications on Earth, scientists determined that frozen carbon dioxide on Mars could move the sand or dust piled on top of it as it vaporizes.

    In the spring, the Martian frost is heated enough to shift the overlaying sediment down steep slopes, gashing the surface like water running downhill.

    A cushion of carbon dioxide

    While gullies scar steep slopes and craters at the polar caps of Mars, such regions have been too cold, even in the past, to allow for liquid water on the surface.  The polar surface, which is often covered by layers of Martian dust and sand, is made up of frozen carbon dioxide and water.

    When the sun strikes the polar caps, the frozen gas and water don't melt. Instead they sublimate, changing from solid directly to gas, without pausing to form a liquid. [Photos: The Search for Water on Mars]

    The vapor lifts the sediment off the surface, reducing the friction and allowing the dirt to move more easily.

    "The air provides a cushion so the particles don't stick to each other and stop moving," Allan Treiman of the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Texas told SPACE.com.

    Treiman worked with Yolanda Cedillo-Flores, of the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, to determine that sublimation could move sufficient dust and sand to create gullies.

    "It's most likely to happen in the spring, when the polar slopes warm up," Treiman said.

    Before the carbon dioxide can sublimate, the frost must dip to minus 108 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 78 degrees Celsius). Such a temperature depends on not only how little sunlight strikes the surface, but also how much sediment is on top of the frost.

    "When you get a thick enough layer, the sand acts as an insulator and the sun can't get through," Treiman said.

    A warmer region with a thick layer of sediment might not sublimate, but a cooler region with a thin layer could result in gullies, according to the team's calculations.

    Industrial revolution

    The team used equations relied on by industries that constantly move small bits of matter. A company that needs to move corn or grain from a silo, for instance, might add air to keep the particles from clumping. Coal and pharmaceutical businesses also rely on air to keep things moving smoothly.

    The companies use an equation to tell them how much air to introduce. Cedillo-Flroes' team worked backward to calculate how much carbon dioxide was needed, then determined that the temperatures on Mars could support such flows.

    Because the Earth is warmer and wetter than the Red Planet, such processes rarely occur naturally here.

    Instead, loose snow on the surface of an avalanche might mix with air, creating a slurry that slides rapidly down mountains. And in China, which boasts dust from glacial times, earthquakes can lead to large dust flows that are lifted by air.

    "They look like huge molasses flows," Treiman said.

    Still, even these processes are the exception, not the rule. Particles on Earth tend to bond.

    "There's just enough water in the atmosphere to make them stick together," Treiman said.

    Besides, "it's never cold enough for carbon dioxide frost," Treiman said.

    The processes may be rare on Earth, but Treiman thinks they are good candidates for solving the mystery of gully creation on Mars.

    "It's a way of explaining ... the ones at the poles, where there's no hope of finding water," he said.

    Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

     

    19 comments

    • Kirstin  •  2 mths ago
      Awesome. This has been one of the proposed explanations for a while; it's nice to see it's holding up to tests. I mean, I really really really would like there to be water flowing on Mars, but the cool thing about science is finding out stuff you didn't know before. And that's awesome no matter what it is.
    • JJMurray  •  2 mths ago
      So when the headline says "Solved" they actually mean someone has a theory.
      Yeah, that's about the level that journalism has descended to now-a-days.
    • Roto  •  2 mths ago
      Mars is about as likely to have life as the earth is to have intelligent life! 1 in a million.
    • vic  •  York, United States  •  2 mths ago
      [ ] solved
      [x] NOT solved
    • Bill  •  2 mths ago
      I'd be willing to bet that Mars will eventually turn out to be just as boring and disappointing as the moon was. The reason we sent people to the moon but then never returned again is because we didn't find any Klingons there.
    • Tugchug  •  San Diego, United States  •  2 mths ago
      This article BITES. It said solved!
    • inicio_inieci_iniectum  •  2 mths ago
      I think the AP most be subcontracted by space.com to write this stuff. Just more back and forth between sceptics and proponents of liquid water. Sounds like this article is fodder for the sceptics.
    • SgtNutsac  •  Englewood, United States  •  2 mths ago
      How friggin hard can it be to find life on another planet. Why don't the point the Keppler at the stars that people say other people come froma and watch those?
    • RickT  •  2 mths ago
      The attention grabbing headline says: solved
      The first sentence of the article says: could be
      Solved is a loonnnng way from could be.
      But the article was none the less interesting.
    • AdamKadmon  •  Booneville, United States  •  2 mths ago
      I love it when they say somethings "solved" and then in the article say, "it's a possible answer." Two totally different things. Also, the Poles shift on Mars because it has no large moon to stabilize it's tilt, so saying it doesn't melt is just wrong.
    • John  •  Hope, United States  •  2 mths ago
      And the Martians said"there goes the neighborhood"
    • J  •  Aransas Pass, United States  •  2 mths ago
      who really cares what humans think, except for other humans? what a redundant, useless life form. in fact,all of life is redundant and useless. i wish we could wipe out the universe and existence altogether.
    • DonC  •  Albany, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Awwwwww, no little green Martian slaves digging trenches for their Marsmen overlords? They spoil everything with their stupid facts.
    • O.G. - Oscar the Grouch  •  Schenectady, United States  •  2 mths ago
      mars sucks
    • Horatio  •  2 mths ago
      What's the scale of these events? One wonders if they could do a scaled experiment?
    • Farside Jim  •  Surfside, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Actually they were formed by the "Grays" using ray guns just because they love shooting snow pipes on their snow boards and better on Mars because there are no whacked out humans to regulate or tax them or whine about how they are damaging the environment....
    • Observe 1  •  2 mths ago
      Deeper study for me.
    • a dog named skanky  •  2 mths ago
      Let me see this is the same stuff that causes global warming on earth? Yet its thick eoungh on mars to move sand and its too cold for liquid water......
      Yea I'm gullable eoungh to buy one of them.....
    • cantdrive85  •  Denver, United States  •  2 mths ago
      EDM (Electrical Discharge Machining) is a well understood industrial process and is the most likely cause of nearly all of the Martian terrestrial features ( Valles Marineris, Olympus Mons, craters, rilles, sand dunes, etc.) and not water or CO2. Theoretical (fantasy world) physicists need to be replaced by Plasma physicists and Electrical engineers in the space sciences.
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