Affiliation:
1. Dipartimento di Matematica e Fisica Roma Tre University Rome Italy
2. Department of Space Studies Southwest Research Institute Boulder CO USA
3. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Illinois Chicago Chicago IL USA
4. Center for Wave Phenomena Colorado School of Mines Golden CO USA
5. Centre for Astrophysics Institute for Advanced Engineering and Space Sciences University of Southern Queensland Toowomba QLD Australia
Abstract
AbstractIt has recently been suggested that clay minerals, which are widespread on the Martian surface, could be the possible source of the basal bright reflections detected by MARSIS at Ultimi Scopuli, instead of briny water. This hypothesis is based on dielectric measurements on a wet Ca‐Montorillonite (STx‐1b) sample conducted at 230 K, which reported permittivity values (apparent permittivity of 39 at 4 MHz) compatible with the median value of 33 retrieved by MARSIS 4 MHz data inversion in the high reflectivity area. These experimental results are, however, incompatible with well‐established dielectric theory and with laboratory measurements on clays, at MARSIS frequency and Martian temperatures, reported in the literature. Here, we replicate the experiment using a setup to precisely control the rate of cooling/warming and the temperature inside and outside the clay sample. We found that the rate of cooling, the position of the temperature sensor and, consequently, the thermal equilibrium between the sample and the sensor play a fundamental role in the reliability of the measurements. Our results indicate that even for a large water content in the clay sample, at 230 K and 4 MHz, the apparent permittivity is only 8.4, dropping to 4.1 at 200 K, ruling out clays as a possible source of the bright reflections detected by MARSIS at the base of the SPLD.
Funder
Agenzia Spaziale Italiana
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics
Cited by
6 articles.
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