Literature DB >> 16001062

Indication of drier periods on Mars from the chemistry and mineralogy of atmospheric dust.

Walter Goetz1, Preben Bertelsen, Charlotte S Binau, Haraldur P Gunnlaugsson, Stubbe F Hviid, Kjartan M Kinch, Daniel E Madsen, Morten B Madsen, Malte Olsen, Ralf Gellert, Göstar Klingelhöfer, Douglas W Ming, Richard V Morris, Rudolf Rieder, Daniel S Rodionov, Paulo A de Souza, Christian Schröder, Steve W Squyres, Tom Wdowiak, Albert Yen.   

Abstract

The ubiquitous atmospheric dust on Mars is well mixed by periodic global dust storms, and such dust carries information about the environment in which it once formed and hence about the history of water on Mars. The Mars Exploration Rovers have permanent magnets to collect atmospheric dust for investigation by instruments on the rovers. Here we report results from Mössbauer spectroscopy and X-ray fluorescence of dust particles captured from the martian atmosphere by the magnets. The dust on the magnets contains magnetite and olivine; this indicates a basaltic origin of the dust and shows that magnetite, not maghemite, is the mineral mainly responsible for the magnetic properties of the dust. Furthermore, the dust on the magnets contains some ferric oxides, probably including nanocrystalline phases, so some alteration or oxidation of the basaltic dust seems to have occurred. The presence of olivine indicates that liquid water did not play a dominant role in the processes that formed the atmospheric dust.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16001062     DOI: 10.1038/nature03807

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  3 in total

1.  Dust deposition on the decks of the Mars Exploration Rovers: 10 years of dust dynamics on the Panoramic Camera calibration targets.

Authors:  Kjartan M Kinch; James F Bell; Walter Goetz; Jeffrey R Johnson; Jonathan Joseph; Morten Bo Madsen; Jascha Sohl-Dickstein
Journal:  Earth Space Sci       Date:  2015-05-23       Impact factor: 2.900

2.  Chemistry, mineralogy, and grain properties at Namib and High dunes, Bagnold dune field, Gale crater, Mars: A synthesis of Curiosity rover observations.

Authors:  B L Ehlmann; K S Edgett; B Sutter; C N Achilles; M L Litvak; M G A Lapotre; R Sullivan; A A Fraeman; R E Arvidson; D F Blake; N T Bridges; P G Conrad; A Cousin; R T Downs; T S J Gabriel; R Gellert; V E Hamilton; C Hardgrove; J R Johnson; S Kuhn; P R Mahaffy; S Maurice; M McHenry; P-Y Meslin; D W Ming; M E Minitti; J M Morookian; R V Morris; C D O'Connell-Cooper; P C Pinet; S K Rowland; S Schröder; K L Siebach; N T Stein; L M Thompson; D T Vaniman; A R Vasavada; D F Wellington; R C Wiens; A S Yen
Journal:  J Geophys Res Planets       Date:  2017-12-07       Impact factor: 3.755

3.  The Medusae Fossae Formation as the single largest source of dust on Mars.

Authors:  Lujendra Ojha; Kevin Lewis; Suniti Karunatillake; Mariek Schmidt
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-07-20       Impact factor: 14.919

  3 in total

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