Nitrogen evolution and present day distribution on Mars

Mathematics – Logic

Scientific paper

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Scientific paper

Nitrogen is an essential element for life. Specifically, fixed nitrogen (i.e., NH_3, NH_4^+, NO_3^-, NO_2^- and N chemically bound to either inorganic or organic molecules and is releasable by hydrolysis to NH_3 or NH_4^+) is the form of nitrogen useful to living organisms. Nitrogen on present-day Mars has been analyzed only in the atmosphere. The inventory is a small fraction of the nitrogen complement presumed to have been received by the planet during its accretion. Where is the missing N? Answering this question is crucial for understanding of the probability of life evolution on Mars and for future exobiological exploration of this intriguing planet. Two main processes could have removed N from the atmosphere: 1) escape to space; 2) burial within the regolith. Non thermal escape to space due to atmospheric erosion has been suggested but its extent has not been constrained yet. No traces of organic compounds were detected in Mars soil by the Viking Landers. However, direct in situ analysis of mineral N concentration in Martian soils and rocks has not been performed yet. Due to the lack of neither biological (denitrification) nor geological (plate tectonics) recycling of N on the surface of Mars, nitrogen may have been stored in the Martian regolith as soluble inorganic salts of NO_3^- and NH_4^+, and as mineral-bound NH_4^+. Nitrates will be stable in the highly oxidized surface soil of Mars, and will tend to accumulate there. Such accumulations are observed in cold and extremely arid environments on Earth (e.g. Antarctica, the Atacama Desert). NH_4^+-N may be bound and stabilized in the soil replacing K as a structural cation in silicate minerals. In this paper we constrain the possible total N content in the Mars crust/regolith using information obtained from Mars (SNC) meteorites analyses. Further, we briefly discuss chemical, physical and, possibly, biological processes that may have affected the patterns of N distribution in the top horizons of Mars lithosphere. We hypothesize that Mars soil and regolith, as typical of extremely dry and cold desert environments on Earth, may contain at least some of the "missing" planetary N as nitrate salts and mineral-bound ammonium. The search for NO_3^- and NH_4^+ should continue during future missions to Mars. Quantifying nitrogen content in the regolith is important for closing the nitrogen balance of Mars and the assessment of the potential for past evolution and future support of life on this planet.

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