It’s nothing you’d want to baste a turkey with, but researchers have found evidence of supersalty brines on the surface of Mars.
By lowering the melting point of water and actively absorbing vapor,
the salts might allow for liquid water to exist on Mars — not billions
of years in the past, but right now.
A Salty Solution
Here’s how it works: Mars has water vapor in its atmosphere. At
night, that water vapor sublimates (turns from liquid into solid) as
ground frost, just like it sometimes does on Earth. But when the frost
lands on soils laced with calcium perchlorate, Ca(ClO4)2, it melts. The perchlorate absorbs the water and forms a salty solution.
And just like the salt we sprinkle on winter roads, the martian salt
lowers water’s freezing point. Instead of icy dirt, salt may give Mars
wet dirt, with the liquid water seeping down into the soil.
Prediction Come True
Last July, a team at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor predicted that exactly this kind of chemistry
might be happening on Mars. Obsessed with what appeared to be liquid
droplets on the leg of the Phoenix lander, they holed up in their lab to
figure out how that was possible.
In their Mars Atmospheric Chamber, an apparatus that would look at
home in a brewery, they simulated Mars’s conditions to see if they could
wring water from the air. “When the scientists placed calcium
perchlorate or salty soil directly on a 0.1-inch-thick ice layer, drops
of liquid water formed within minutes when the chambers reached -100°
F,” said a LiveScience article from the time of discovery.
This new discovery builds on that. Researchers found perchlorate in
the soil of the Gale crater and calculated that humidity and temperature
would be right for brine formation in that same region. The necessary
conditions exist at night and just after winter sunrise, the researchers
report in Nature Geoscience.
Postcards from Mars
Curiosity has spent almost three years on Mars. In all that time,
it’s traveled a whopping 10 kilometers from its landing site. That’s the
distance of a weekend warrior’s running race (although no one has to
command and control a weekend warrior’s every step from millions of
miles away), a short distance that nevertheless has given the rover a
taste of different martian environments.
Curiosity has shown us that Mars used to have habitable spots (even
if nothing/no one inhabited them) and that billions of years ago, it had an ocean that could have covered the whole planet in 450 feet of water.
And findings like this brine show present-day Mars to be a bit more
life-friendly than we thought. On Earth, for example, organisms called
halophiles (salt lovers/lickers) would love to live in
calcium-perchlorate-land. But, as the authors caution, there’s a lot
more to habitability than “just add water.” Mars is dry, cold, and
irradiated, and so far shows no evidence that anybody is home. And the
dirt where these brine remnants were seen, Gale crater, gets too cold to
host any known microbes.
But liquid brines might be abundant across Mars’ surface. So, some
further trekking might eventually reveal whether any salty critters
still call those soils home.
SOURCE:
Discovermagazine



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