NASA Space Science News
What
makes the Red Planet red?
Scientists
think Mars has a bad case of rust. Martian soil is full of iron-bearing
compounds that, over the eons, have reacted with trace amounts
of oxygen and water vapor in Mars' atmosphere to form iron oxide
-- the same chemical that covers innumerable rusty nails in garages
and workshops on Earth.

Above:
A panoramic view of Mars from
the Sagan Memorial Station where Pathfinder landed in 1997.
The word "rust"
conjures up images of things that are red --like Mars and old
nails-- but not all iron oxide is the same color. Here on Earth
a gray-hued variety of iron oxide, a mineral called hematite,
can precipitate in hot springs or in standing pools of water.
Gray hematite
is not the sort of rust you might expect to find on a desert-dry
planet like Mars. But perhaps Mars wasn't always as dry as it
is today. There are many signs of ancient or hidden water on the
Red Planet including flash-flood gullies, sedimentary layers ...
and hematite.
In 1998, an
infrared spectrometer on NASA's Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) spacecraft
detected a substantial deposit of gray hematite near the Martian
equator, in a 500 km-wide region called Sinus Meridiani. The discovery
raised the tantalizing possibility that hot springs were once
active on Mars.
Right:
An artist's concept of ancient
hot springs on Mars where gray hematite might have collected.
"We believe
that the gray hematite is very strong evidence that water was
once present in that area," said Victoria Hamilton, a planetary
geologist at Arizona State University (ASU). "We think the
deposit is fairly old. It was buried, perhaps, for several hundred
million years or more and now it's being exposed by wind erosion."
Gray hematite
has the same chemical formula (Fe2O3) as its rusty-red cousin,
but a different crystalline structure. Red rust is fine and powdery;
typical grains are hundreds of nanometers to a few microns across.
Gray hematite crystals are larger, like grains of sand.
"Red
and gray iron oxides on Mars are really just different forms of
the same mineral," explained Hamilton. "If you ground
up the gray hematite into a fine powder it would turn red because
the smaller grains scatter red light."
The coarse-grained
structure of gray hematite is important, says ASU's Jack Farmer,
head of the NASA Astrobiology Institute's Mars Focus Group, because
"to get that kind of coarsening of the crystallinity, you
would need to have a reasonable amount of water available"
where the hematite formed.
The link between
water and gray hematite makes the so-called "Hematite Site"
(Sinus Meridiani) an alluring target for future Mars landers as
well as for remote sensing instruments on the 2001 Mars Odyssey
spacecraft -- slated to launch on April 7th.
Left:
The distribution of hematite in
Sinus Meridiani. This image, courtesy of Phil Christensen, is
reprinted from "Global mapping of Martian hematite mineral
deposits: Remnants of water-driven processes on early Mars",
by P.R. Christensen et al., Journal of Geophysical Research, in
press.
Odyssey will
carry an infrared imaging camera called THEMIS (short for Thermal
Emission Imaging System) that can identify surface minerals from
orbit by analyzing their spectral "fingerprints."
"It turns
out that all materials vibrate at the atomic scale," explains
Hamilton. "For minerals, the rate at which the atoms vibrate
corresponds to the thermal infrared part of the electromagnetic
spectrum, between about 5 and 50 microns. Those are longer wavelengths
than what our eyes can see." Every mineral has a unique infrared
spectrum that identifies it as surely as the fingerprints of a
human being, she added.
THEMIS is
a "next-generation" instrument that can capture sharper
images than TES, the Thermal Emission Spectrometer that is orbiting
Mars now aboard Mars Global Surveyor. THEMIS will be able to discern
the mineral content of geological features only 100 meters across,
compared to 3 km for TES.

Above:
The spectral "fingerprint"
of hematite. The peaks and valleys of this graph are characteristic
of infrared emissions from hematite. Courtesy of the Arizona State
University Thermal Emission Spectral Library.
Of many candidate
landing sites for NASA's 2003 Mars Exploration Rovers, the Sinus
Meridiani region is one of the most intriguing to scientists.
THEMIS data could help planners pinpoint the best places to land,
especially if the maps reveal deposits of other aqueous minerals
such as carbonates or sulfates.
"The
interesting thing about carbonates and sulfates," says Phil
Christensen, principal investigator for THEMIS, "is that
these materials can be better (than hematite) at preserving a
fossil record. Some of them, like carbonates, would also indicate
that standing bodies of water were present on the surface."
Hematite minerals, on the other hand, might have been formed by
hydrothermal water deep underground.
So far, instruments
on MGS have found no direct evidence for carbonates or sulfates
anywhere on Mars. The absence of such aqueous minerals is a mystery
if liquid Martian water -- in the form of lakes, rivers or oceans
-- was indeed abundant in the planet's geological past.
Christensen
cautions that the spatial resolution of TES on Mars Global Surveyor
might not have been good enough to detect small deposits of carbonates.
With its superior resolution, THEMIS has a better chance. For
example, TES would not have detected the carbonate layers in Earth's
Grand Canyon, but THEMIS would.

Above:
THEMIS's infrared capabilities
will significantly improve the data from TES, a similar instrument
on Mars Global Surveyor. THEMIS map pixels will occupy just 0.01
square-kilometers compared to 9 square-km per pixel for TES. This
image shows how California's Saline Valley might appear to both
instruments.
Until someone
finds signs of carbonates or sulfates on Mars, perhaps in some
future THEMIS image, gray hematite remains the best known mineral
signpost for ancient Martian water.
The hematite
makes scientists wonder, was there once a Martian equivalent of
Yellowstone National Park where steaming hot springs formed hematite-laden
pools? And are underground springs still present there today?
Human exploration of the Red Planet could hinge on the answers.
And there may be no better place to find out than Sinus Meridiani,
where the lure of hematite is powerful indeed.
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