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In situ analysis of surface composition and meteorology at the Zhurong landing site on Mars.

Yu-Yan Sara ZhaoJin YuGuangfei WeiLu PanXiangfeng LiuYangting LinYang LiuChen SunXiyu WangJuntao WangWeijie XuYunfei RaoWeiming XuTianyang SunFengye ChenBeiyi ZhangHonglei LinZhenqiang ZhangSen HuXiang-Yu LiXiao-Wen YuShuai-Yi QuDi-Sheng ZhouXing WuXiaojia ZengXiongyao LiHong TangJianzhong Liu
Published in: National science review (2023)
The Zhurong rover of the Tianwen-1 mission landed in southern Utopia Planitia, providing a unique window into the evolutionary history of the Martian lowlands. During its first 110 sols, Zhurong investigated and categorized surface targets into igneous rocks, lithified duricrusts, cemented duricrusts, soils and sands. The lithified duricrusts, analysed by using laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy onboard Zhurong, show elevated water contents and distinct compositions from those of igneous rocks. The cemented duricrusts are likely formed via water vapor-frost cycling at the atmosphere-soil interface, as supported by the local meteorological conditions. Soils and sands contain elevated magnesium and water, attributed to both hydrated magnesium salts and adsorbed water. The compositional and meteorological evidence indicates potential Amazonian brine activities and present-day water vapor cycling at the soil-atmosphere interface. Searching for further clues to water-related activities and determining the water source by Zhurong are critical to constrain the volatile evolution history at the landing site.
Keyphrases
  • air pollution
  • high resolution
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  • total hip