Showing posts with label MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

THE MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE, GONE WITH THE WIND

FROM: NASA

Billions of years ago, Mars had a lot more air than it does today. (Note: Martian "air" is primarily carbon dioxide, not the nitrogen-oxygen mix we breathe on Earth.) Ancient martian lake-beds and river channels tell the tale of a planet covered by abundant water and wrapped in an atmosphere thick enough to prevent that water from evaporating into space. Some researchers believe the atmosphere of Mars was once as thick as Earth's. Today, however, all those lakes and rivers are dry and the atmospheric pressure on Mars is only 1% that of Earth at sea-level. A cup of water placed almost anywhere on the Martian surface would quickly and violently boil away—a result of the super-low air pressure.

 


Mars Atmosphere Loss


This video illustration shows how Mars may have lost its atmosphere to the solar wind after the Red Planet's magnetic field died.

 

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