Posted on 11/14/2019 11:29:07 AM PST by ShadowAce
NASAs Curiosity rover returned some seriously surprising data to Earth earlier this year, with readings of elevated methane levels that were hard to explain. Subsequent tests attempted to pin down the cause of the higher-than-expected readings but scientists have yet to come up with a definitive answer.
Now, as questions about methane continue to swirl, scientists studying the behavior of gasses on Mars have noticed that oxygen on the Red Planet also acts much differently than it does on Earth. The observations were made in the Gale Crater, which the rover has called home since it landed there back in 2012.
Curiosity breathes the air on Mars and analyzes it to determine the levels of various types of gasses that are present. On Earth, the background levels of certain gasses rise and fall with seasons, and the same seems to be true on Mars, but only to a point.
The air on Mars is largely carbon dioxide. In fact, a full 95% of the gas Curiosity breathes in during its tests is CO2. The remaining 5% is a mix of nitrogen, argon, oxygen, and carbon monoxide. By plotting levels of these gasses over the course of a full Martian year, scientists have noticed anomalies with regard to the amount of oxygen, relative to other gasses.
NASA explains:
Within this environment, scientists found that nitrogen and argon follow a predictable seasonal pattern, waxing and waning in concentration in Gale Crater throughout the year relative to how much CO2 is in the air. They expected oxygen to do the same. But it didnt. Instead, the amount of the gas in the air rose throughout spring and summer by as much as 30%, and then dropped back to levels predicted by known chemistry in fall.
The fact that the oxygen levels vary as wildly as they do is significant because it hints at as-of-yet undiscovered processes at work on the surface of the planet. For the oxygen levels to see a significant upward spike and then a dramatically fall, something must be creating it and then another something is using it.
Were struggling to explain this, Melissa Trainer of NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center says. The fact that the oxygen behavior isnt perfectly repeatable every season makes us think that its not an issue that has to do with atmospheric dynamics. It has to be some chemical source and sink that we cant yet account for.
Before you start dreaming of a subterranean race of Martian monsters, its important to know that this isnt a smoking gun for life on Mars. In fact, its far from it. There are natural processes that can generate oxygen in the absence of life, and since we have yet to find evidence of life on the Red Planet, yet cant rule it out, scientists are considering all possible options.
I’m so glad I don’t live on Mars anymore. With all the CO2 in the atmosphere, the plants were getting absolutely hugh!
Fire rockets full of kudzu at it.
There are permanganate compounds in the soil. This is a type of chemical compound which incorporates a large oxygen content. Very active chemical available if perhaps there are some Martian microbes, which can process this for metabolic energy.
So Curiosity has gone ~4x its projected operating cycle.
We’d know if some things went on the blink: a broken wheel or camera that went glitchy. But some of these accessories that take measurements, such as what is being discussed in the article, how do we know if these readings are truly accurate?
I suppose that, good or bad, all these readings are benchmarks that will verified or challenged in the future. But I wonder if, so long as they are operating, their measurements will continue to be as accurate now as on the day the rovers landed.
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And in a few years the whole planet will be KUDZU.
Scratch ‘truly accurate’. Insert ‘still accurate.’
bkmk
[[Nobody knows whats creating oxygen on Mars]]
Al Gore invented oxygen on Mars
Fastest and cheapest way to terraform the place.
Mars has CO2, so what’s the problem?
Don Cheadle’s plants.
Would water vapor increase detectable Oxygen?
“Before you start dreaming of a subterranean race of Martian monsters, its important to know that this isnt a smoking gun for life on Mars. In fact, its far from it. There are natural processes that can generate oxygen in the absence of life, and since we have yet to find evidence of life on the Red Planet, yet cant rule it out, scientists are considering all possible options.”
This still doesn’t answer what is “using” it once it is made.
I love Thomas Gold. He was exactly right.
My highly unscientific guess is that nothing is using it. Given the lack of atmospheric pressure, I'm gonna say that it all just dissipates out into space.
He's one of my favorite polymaths.
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