4.8 Article

Detection of molecular hydrogen in the atmosphere of Mars

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 294, Issue 5548, Pages 1914-1917

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1065569

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Four hydrogen (H-2) lines have been detected in a spectrum of Mars observed with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer. Three of those lines are excited by the solar Lyman beta photons. The line intensities correspond to a column H-2 abundance of 1.17 (+/-0.13) x 10(13) per square centimeter above 140 kilometers on Mars. A photochemical model for the upper atmosphere that simulates the observed H-2 abundance results in an H-2 mixing ratio of 15 +/- 5 parts per million in the lower atmosphere. The H-2 and HD mixing ratios agree with photochemical fractionation of D (deuterium) between H2O and H-2. Analysis of D fractionation among a few reservoirs of ice, water vapor, and molecular hydrogen on Mars implies that a global ocean more than 30 meters deep was lost since the end of hydrodynamic escape. Only 4% of the initially accreted water remained on the planet at the end of hydrodynamic escape, and initially Mars could have had even more water (as a proportion of mass) than Earth.

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