Oxygen Isotope Fractionation Due to Non-Thermal Escape of Hot O from the Atmosphere of Mars

Author:

Lyons James R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Planetary Science Institute, 1700 East Fort Lowell, Suite 106, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA

Abstract

Secondary minerals in SNC meteorites from Mars exhibit O isotope ratios believed to be consistent with the non-thermal escape of O from the atmosphere. The primary source of the non-thermal O is the dissociative- recombination of O2+ in the ionosphere. I present here the results of a model that accounts for the probability of escape of non-thermal O isotopes due to collisions with overlying CO2, combined with a model for Rayleigh fractionation of the atmosphere remaining as a result of O escape. Previous analyses of MAVEN number density data have shown a strong variability with latitude and season of the heights of the homopause and exobase, with a mean homopause at 110 km and a mean difference of about 60 km. Rayleigh model results demonstrate a dependence on homopause height and on temperature profile and require a more accurate calculation of fractionation factors for the Rayleigh equation. Isothermal temperature profiles yield much smaller variation in 17O with homopause height. These results demonstrate the need for a careful assessment of O isotope enrichment due to non-thermal escape both for the modern atmosphere and for the evolution of the atmosphere over the age of the planet.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference15 articles.

1. Isotope fractionation in the photochemical escape of O from Mars;Fox;Icarus,2010

2. Loss of the Martian atmosphere to space: Present-day loss rates determined from MAVEN observations and integrated loss through time;Jakosky;Icarus,2018

3. Oxygen cycle of the Martian atmosphere-regolith system: D17O of secondary phases in Nakhla and Lafayette;Farquhar;J. Geophys. Res.,2000

4. Mars volatile evolution: Implications of the recent measurement of 17O in water from the SNC meteorites;Jakosky;Geophys. Res. Lett.,1993

5. Variability of Martian Turbopause Altitudes;Slipski;J. Geophys. Res. Planets,2018

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