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Water heavily fractionated as it ascends on Mars as revealed by ExoMars/NOMAD.

Geronimo L VillanuevaGiuliano LiuzziMatteo M J CrismaniShohei AokiAnn Carine VandaeleFrank DaerdenMichael D SmithMichael J MummaElise W KnutsenLori NearySébastien ViscardyIan R ThomasMiguel Angel Lopez-ValverdeBojan RisticManish R PatelJames A HolmesGiancarlo BellucciJose Juan Lopez-Morenonull null
Published in: Science advances (2021)
Isotopic ratios and, in particular, the water D/H ratio are powerful tracers of the evolution and transport of water on Mars. From measurements performed with ExoMars/NOMAD, we observe marked and rapid variability of the D/H along altitude on Mars and across the whole planet. The observations (from April 2018 to April 2019) sample a broad range of events on Mars, including a global dust storm, the evolution of water released from the southern polar cap during southern summer, the equinox phases, and a short but intense regional dust storm. In three instances, we observe water at very high altitudes (>80 km), the prime region where water is photodissociated and starts its escape to space. Rayleigh distillation appears the be the driving force affecting the D/H in many cases, yet in some instances, the exchange of water reservoirs with distinctive D/H could be responsible.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule