Putzig Nathaniel E, Smith Isaac B, Perry Matthew R, Foss Frederick J, Campbell Bruce A, Phillips Roger J, Seu Roberto
Planetary Science Institute, 1546 Cole Boulevard, Suite 120, Lakewood, CO 80401, USA.
Freestyle Analytical and Quantitative Services, LLC, 2210 Parkview Drive, Longmont, CO 80504, USA.
Icarus. 2018 Jul 1;308:138-147. doi: 10.1016/j.icarus.2017.09.023. Epub 2017 Sep 22.
Over the last decade, observations acquired by the Shallow Radar (SHARAD) sounder on individual passes of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have revealed the internal structure of the Martian polar caps and provided new insights into the formation of the icy layers within and their relationship to climate. However, a complete picture of the cap interiors has been hampered by interfering reflections from off-nadir surface features and signal losses associated with sloping structures and scattering. Foss et al. (2017) addressed these limitations by assembling three-dimensional data volumes of SHARAD observations from thousands of orbital passes over each polar region and applying geometric corrections simultaneously. The radar volumes provide unprecedented views of subsurface features, readily imaging structures previously inferred from time-intensive manual analysis of single-orbit data (e.g., trough-bounding surfaces, a buried chasma, and a basal unit in the north, massive carbon-dioxide ice deposits and discontinuous layered sequences in the south). Our new mapping of the carbon-dioxide deposits yields a volume of 16,500 km, 11% larger than the prior estimate. In addition, the radar volumes newly reveal other structures, including what appear to be buried impact craters with no surface expression. Our first assessment of 21 apparent craters at the base of the north polar layered deposits suggests a Hesperian age for the substrate, consistent with that of the surrounding plains as determined from statistics of surface cratering rates. Planned mapping of similar features throughout both polar volumes may provide new constraints on the age of the icy layered deposits. The radar volumes also provide new topographic data between the highest latitudes observed by the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter and those observed by SHARAD. In general, mapping of features in these radar volumes is placing new constraints on the nature and evolution of the polar deposits and associated climate changes.
在过去十年中,火星勘测轨道飞行器上的浅地层雷达(SHARAD)探测器在其对火星的各次飞越过程中所获取的观测数据,揭示了火星极地冰盖的内部结构,并为冰盖内部冰层的形成及其与气候的关系提供了新的见解。然而,由于来自偏离天底表面特征的干扰反射以及与倾斜结构和散射相关的信号损失,冰盖内部的完整图像一直难以获得。福斯等人(2017年)通过收集来自每个极地地区数千次轨道飞越的SHARAD观测数据的三维数据体,并同时应用几何校正,解决了这些限制。这些雷达数据体提供了前所未有的地下特征视图,能够轻松成像以前通过对单轨道数据进行耗时的人工分析推断出的结构(例如,槽边界表面、一个埋藏的峡谷以及北部的一个基底单元、南部大量的二氧化碳冰沉积物和不连续的层序)。我们对二氧化碳沉积物的新测绘得出其体积为16500立方千米,比先前的估计大11%。此外,雷达数据体新揭示了其他结构,包括似乎是没有表面迹象的埋藏撞击坑。我们对北极层状沉积物底部21个明显撞击坑的首次评估表明,该基底形成于晚重轰炸期,这与根据表面撞击坑统计数据确定的周围平原的年龄一致。计划对两个极地地区的类似特征进行测绘,可能会为冰层沉积物的年龄提供新的限制。这些雷达数据体还提供了火星轨道激光高度计观测的最高纬度和SHARAD观测的最高纬度之间的新地形数据。总体而言,对这些雷达数据体中特征的测绘正在对极地沉积物的性质和演化以及相关气候变化施加新的限制。