Impact Induced Oxidation and Its Implications for Early Mars Climate

Author:

Pan Lu12ORCID,Deng Zhengbin13,Bizzarro Martin1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Star and Planet Formation Globe Institute University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

2. Deep Space Exploration Laboratory/Laboratory of Seismology and Physics of Earth's Interior School of Earth and Space Sciences University of Science and Technology of China Hefei China

3. Deep Space Exploration Laboratory/CAS Key Laboratory of Crust‐Mantle Materials and Environments School of Earth and Space Sciences University of Science and Technology of China Hefei China

Abstract

AbstractH2 in a CO2 atmosphere may serve as a potential solution to the early Mars climate paradox, but its unknown sources cast doubts on the proposed mechanism. Impact cratering is an energetic process that may modify the surface redox budget. Here, we investigate the potential influence of impact‐related melt oxidation and serpentinization on global climate conditions. We show that impact melt and the projectile's significant oxidizing potential during basin‐forming impacts (Basin size ≥1,250 km) result in sufficient H2 to raise the global mean temperature to above 273K, which lasts for up to 105 − 106 yr considering rate‐limited regime. Impact‐induced serpentinization has limited consequences on the global climate in comparison. Episodic warming after large impacts may have enabled the presence of liquid water for up to several million years in the Noachian, resulting in the chemical evolution of the planet's surface co‐evolving with the planetary atmosphere in an episodic manner.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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