A Carbon Dioxide/Methane Greenhouse Atmosphere on Early Mars
Abstract
One explanation for the formation of fluvial surface features on early Mars is that the global average surface temperature was maintained at or above the freezing point of water by the greenhouse warming of a dense CO2 atmosphere; however, Kasting has shown that CO2 alone is insufficient because the formation of CO2 clouds reduces the magnitude of the greenhouse effect. It is possible that other gases, such as NH3 and CH4, were present in the early atmosphere of Mars and contributed to the greenhouse effect. Kasting et al. investigated the effect of NH3 in a CO2 atmosphere and calculated that an NH3 mixing ratio of approximately 5 x 10 -4 by volume, combined with a CO2 partial pressure of 4-5 bar, could generate a global average surface temperature of 273 K near 3.8 b.y. ago when the fluvial features are believed to have formed. Atmospheric NH3 is photochemically converted to N2 by ultraviolet radiation at wavelengths shortward of 230 nm; maintenance of sufficient NH3 concentrations would therefore require a source of NH3 to balance the photolytic destruction. We have used a one-dimensional photochemical model to estimate the magnitude of the NH3 source required to maintain a given NH3 concentration in a dense CO2 atmosphere. We calculate that an NH3 mixing ratio of 10-4 requires a flux of NH3 on the order of 1012 molecules /cm-s. This figure is several orders of magnitude greater than estimates of the NH3 flux on early Mars; thus it appears that NH3 with CO2 is not enough to keep early Mars warm.
- Publication:
-
Early Mars: How Warm and How Wet?
- Pub Date:
- 1993
- Bibcode:
- 1993emhw.workQ...3B
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Heating;
- Carbon Dioxide;
- Greenhouse Effect;
- Landforms;
- Mars Atmosphere;
- Mars Surface;
- Methane;
- Planetary Geology;
- Surface Temperature;
- Ultraviolet Radiation;
- Ammonia;
- Melting Points;
- Mixing Ratios;
- Molecules;
- Partial Pressure;
- Photolysis;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration