A NASA spacecraft studying Mercury has provided
compelling support for the long-held hypothesis the planet harbours abundant
water ice and other frozen volatile materials within its permanently shadowed
polar craters.
The new information comes from NASA's MErcury
Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) spacecraft.
Its on-board instruments have been studying Mercury in unprecedented detail
since its historic arrival there in March 2011. Scientists are seeing clearly
for the first time a chapter in the story of how the inner planets, including
Earth, acquired their water and some of the chemical building blocks for life.
"The new data indicate the water ice in
Mercury's polar regions, if spread over an area the size of Washington, D.C.,
would be more than 2 miles thick," said David Lawrence, a MESSENGER
participating scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory (APL) and lead author of one of three papers
describing the findings. The papers were published online in Thursday's edition
of Science Express.
Spacecraft instruments completed the first
measurements of excess hydrogen at Mercury's North Pole, made the first
measurements of the reflectivity of Mercury's polar deposits at near-infrared
wavelengths, and enabled the first detailed models of the surface and
near-surface temperatures of Mercury's north polar regions.
Given its proximity to the sun, Mercury would
seem to be an unlikely place to find ice. However, the tilt of Mercury's
rotational axis is less than 1 degree, and as a result, there are pockets at
the planet's poles that never see sunlight.
Scientists suggested decades ago there might be
water ice and other frozen volatiles trapped at Mercury's poles. The idea
received a boost in 1991 when the Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico
detected radar-bright patches at Mercury's poles. Many of these patches
corresponded to the locations of large impact craters mapped by NASA's Mariner
10 spacecraft in the 1970s. However, because Mariner saw less than 50 percent
of the planet, planetary scientists lacked a complete diagram of the poles to
compare with the radar images.
Images from the spacecraft taken in 2011 and
earlier this year confirmed all radar-bright features at Mercury's north and
south poles lie within shadowed regions on the planet's surface. These findings
are consistent with the water ice hypothesis.
The new observations from MESSENGER support the
idea that ice is the major constituent of Mercury's north polar deposits. These
measurements also reveal ice is exposed at the surface in the coldest of those
deposits, but buried beneath unusually dark material across most of the
deposits. In the areas where ice is buried, temperatures at the surface are
slightly too warm for ice to be stable.
MESSENGER's neutron spectrometer provides a
measure of average hydrogen concentrations within Mercury's radar-bright
regions. Water ice concentrations are derived from the hydrogen measurements.
"We estimate from our neutron measurements
the water ice lies beneath a layer that has much less hydrogen. The surface
layer is between 10 and 20 centimetres [4-8 inches] thick," Lawrence said.
Additional data from detailed topography maps
compiled by the spacecraft corroborate the radar results and neutron
measurements of Mercury's polar region. In a second paper by Gregory Neumann of
NASA's Goddard Flight Centre in Greenbelt, measurements of the shadowed
north polar regions reveal irregular dark and bright deposits at near-infrared
wavelength near Mercury's North Pole.
"Nobody had seen these dark regions on
Mercury before, so they were mysterious at first," Neumann said.
The spacecraft recorded dark patches with
diminished reflectance, consistent with the theory that ice in those areas is
covered by a thermally insulating layer. Neumann suggests impacts of comets or
volatile-rich asteroids could have provided both the dark and bright deposits,
a finding corroborated in a third paper led by David Paige of the University of
California at Los Angeles.
"The dark material is likely a mix of
complex organic compounds delivered to Mercury by the impacts of comets and
volatile-rich asteroids, the same objects that likely delivered water to the
innermost planet," Paige said.
This dark insulating material is a new wrinkle
to the story, according to MESSENGER principal investigator Sean Solomon of
Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades.
"For more than 20 years, the jury has been
deliberating whether the planet closest to the sun hosts abundant water ice in
its permanently shadowed polar regions," Solomon said. "MESSENGER now
has supplied a unanimous affirmative verdict."
MESSENGER was designed and built by APL. The lab
manages and operates the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in
Washington. The mission is part of NASA's Discovery Program, managed for the
directorate by the agency's Marshall Space Flight Centre in Huntsville.
For more information about the Mercury mission,
visit: http://www.nasa.gov/messenger
Original Source: NASA Messenger Mission
Original Source: NASA Messenger Mission
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