Scientists identify molten layer deep within interior of Mars
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[October 26, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Seismic waves generated by a meteorite impact on
the other side of Mars from where NASA's InSight lander sits have
provided new clues about the Red Planet's deep interior, prompting
scientists to reappraise the anatomy of Earth's planetary neighbor.
The new seismic data indicates the presence of a hitherto unknown layer
of molten rock surrounding a liquid metallic core - the planet's
innermost component - that is smaller and denser than previously
estimated, researchers said on Wednesday.
Waves generated by quakes - including those caused by meteorite impacts
- vary in speed and shape when journeying through different material
inside a planet. Data from InSight's seismometer instrument has enabled
the planet's internal structure to come into focus.
The meteorite impact that occurred in a Martian highland region called
Tempe Terra on Sept. 18, 2021, triggered a magnitude 4.2 quake and left
a crater about 425 feet (130 meters) wide. It occurred on the opposite
side of Mars from InSight's location in a plains region called Elysium
Planitia.
"The importance of the far side impact was to produce seismic waves that
traversed the deep interior of the planet, including the core.
Previously, we had not observed any seismic waves that had transited the
core. We had only seen reflections from the top of the core," said
planetary scientist Amir Khan of ETH Zürich in Switzerland, lead author
of one of two scientific papers on the new findings published in the
journal Nature.
The behavior of the waves indicated that previous assessments of the
Martian interior were missing something - the presence of a molten
silicate layer about 90 miles (150 km) thick surrounding the core. This
molten region sits at the bottom of the interior portion of the planet
called the mantle.
The researchers also recalculated the size of the core, finding that it
has a diameter of about 2,080 miles (3,350 km), with a volume about 30%
smaller than previously thought.
The researchers said the mantle - a rocky layer sandwiched between the
planet's outermost crust and core - extends about 1,055 miles (1,700 km)
below the surface. Unlike Mars, Earth has no molten layer around its
core. One of the two studies published on Wednesday indicates this layer
is fully molten, with the other indicating that most of it is fully
molten, with the top portion partially molten.
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View of the last selfie taken by NASA's InSight Mars lander on April
24, 2022. NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
"The molten and partially molten layer is essentially composed of
silicates (rock-forming minerals) that are enriched in iron and in
radioactive heat-producing elements compared to the overlying solid
mantle," said Henri Samuel, a planetary scientist with the French
national research organization CNRS working at Institut de Physique
du Globe de Paris and lead author of the second study.
The Martian core is made up mostly of iron and nickel, but also has
some lighter elements such as sulfur, oxygen, carbon and hydrogen.
The researchers concluded that these lighter elements make up about
9-15% of the core's composition by weight, lower than previously
estimated.
"This amount of light elements is not unlike that of the Earth's
core, which is estimated to be around 10%," Khan said.
Mars, the fourth planet from the sun, has a diameter of about 4,220
miles (6,791 km), compared to Earth's diameter of about 7,926 miles
(12,755 km). Earth is almost seven times larger in total volume.
NASA retired InSight in 2022 after four years of operations.
"We have learned a lot about Mars by studying the unique seismic
record provided by the InSight mission," Samuel said. "Planets are
rich and complex systems because they are a place where many
different types of processes coexist and act on various spatial and
temporal scales, and Mars is no exception."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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