Physics
Scientific paper
Mar 1995
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1995jgr...100.5541r&link_type=abstract
Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227), Vol. 100, no. E3, p. 5541-5551
Physics
8
Abundance, Clouds (Meteorology), Diffusion Coefficient, Dust, Mars Atmosphere, Mixing, Oxygen, Ozone, Data Reduction, Hydrogen, Phobos, Photochemical Reactions, Turbulent Diffusion, Water Vapor
Scientific paper
A value of the eddy diffusion coefficient K of approximately equals 1.5 x 106 sq cm/s in the middle atmosphere of Mars was obtained from Phobos 2 solar occultation measurements of dust, ozone, and clouds at low latitude. The aim of the present study is to complete this picture by using a steady photochemical one-dimensional model. The main regulation mechanism of O2 is the reaction of O with itself, whose rate depends on the value of K in the middle atmosphere. By comparing calculated and observed values of the O2 abundance, an upper limit of approximately equals 2 x 107/sq cm/s on K is inferred. By including an additional constraint provided by H2 balance, a lower limit of approximately equals 4 x 106/sq cm/s may be placed. It results from the present analysis that the most realistic value of K to be used in works resorting to one-dimensional modeling (long-term evolution, escape, surface/atmosphere exchanges) is approximately equals 107 sq cm/s rather than approximately equals 106 sq cm/s. The difference between theoretical and observational values might be due to the regular occurence of global dust storms, whose effect should be to increase the yearly average value of K. The present study suggests less than 3 precipitable micrometer (pr-micrometer) of the yearly averaged water vapor column, unless H2O is confined in a layer near the ground. Although the first possibility seems far more probable, the second hypothesis cannot be ruled out. It could reflect a continuous supply of H2O from the regolith to the atmosphere on a seasonal scale. The loss to production ratio of CO, which has a lifetime of approximately equals 5 years, is shown to depart from unity by no more than approximately equal to 10% over a wide range of atmospheric conditions. The stability of the Martian Atmosphere is therefore realized in the classical frame of homogeneous chemistry.
Chassefiere Eric
Rosenqvist Jan
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