Sublimation of Exposed Snow Queen Surface Water Ice as Observed by the Phoenix Mars Lander

Physics

Scientific paper

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5400 Planetary Sciences: Solid Surface Planets, 5422 Ices, 5462 Polar Regions

Scientific paper

One of the first images obtained by the Robotic Arm Camera on the Mars Phoenix Lander was that of the surface beneath the spacecraft. This image, taken on sol 4 (Martian day) of the mission, was intended to check the stability of the footpads of the lander and to document the effect the retro-rockets had on the Martian surface. Not completely unexpected the image revealed an oval shaped, relatively bright and apparently smooth object, later named Snow Queen, surrounded by the regolith similar to that already seen throughout the landscape of the landing site. The object was suspected to be the surface of the ice table uncovered by the blast of the retro-rockets during touchdown. High resolution HiRISE images of the landing site from orbit, show a roughly circular dark region of about 40 m diameter with the lander in the center. A plausible explanation for this region being darker than the rest of the visible Martian Northern Planes (here polygonal patterns) is that a thin layer of the material ejected by the retro-rockets covered the original surface. Alternatively the thrusters may have removed the fine surface dust during the last stages of the descent. A simple estimate requires that about 10 cm of the surface material underneath the lander is needed to be ejected and redistributed to create the observed dark circular region. 10 cm is comparable to 4-5 cm predicted depth at which the ice table was expected to be found at the latitude of the Phoenix landing site. The models also predicted that exposed water ice should sublimate at a rate not faster but probably close to 1 mm per sol. Snow Queen was further documented on sols 5, 6 and 21 with no obvious changes detected. The following time it was imaged was on sol 45, 24 sols after the previous observation. This time some clear changes were obvious. Several small cracks, most likely due to thermal cycling and sublimation of water ice appeared. Nevertheless, the bulk of Snow Queen surface remained smooth. The next image of Snow Queen was taken on sol 73. This time its appearance was dramatically different. The surface had become much rougher and many cracks of at least 1 mm depth and decimeter scale length had appeared. The surface colour of Snow Queen was now no longer different from that of the surrounding regolith. This observation is compatible with the ice table sublimating away, leaving behind a lag deposit of thickness of the order of 1 mm. We will present these data as well as thermal models, including the diurnal cycle of the interaction with the atmosphere, which may explain the observed evolution of Snow Queen.

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