19 research outputs found

    The long-term evolution of the atmosphere of Venus: processes and feedback mechanisms

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    In this chapter, we focus on the long-term evolution of the atmosphere of Venus, and how it has been affected by interior/exterior cycles. The formation and evolution of Venus's atmosphere, leading to the present-day surface conditions, remain hotly debated and involve questions that tie into many disciplines. Here, we explore the mechanisms that shaped the evolution of the atmosphere, starting with the volatile sources and sinks. Going from the deep interior to the top of the atmosphere, we describe fundamental processes such as volcanic outgassing, surface-atmosphere interactions, and atmosphere escape. Furthermore, we address more complex aspects of the history of Venus, including the role of meteoritic impacts, how magnetic field generation is tied into long-term evolution, and the implications of feedback cycles for atmospheric evolution. Finally, we highlight three plausible end-member evolutionary pathways that Venus might have followed, from the accretion to its present-day state, based on current modeling and observations. In a first scenario, the planet was desiccated early-on, during the magma ocean phase, by atmospheric escape. In a second scenario, Venus could have harbored surface liquid water for long periods of time, until its temperate climate was destabilized and it entered a runaway greenhouse phase. In a third scenario, Venus's inefficient outgassing could have kept water inside the planet, where hydrogen was trapped in the core and the mantle was oxidized. We discuss existing evidence and future observations/missions needed to refine our understanding of the planet's history and of the complex feedback cycles between the interior, surface, and atmosphere that operate in the past, present or future of Venus

    Venus Evolution Through Time: Key Science Questions, Selected Mission Concepts and Future Investigations

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    In this work we discuss various selected mission concepts addressing Venus evolution through time. More specifically, we address investigations and payload instrument concepts supporting scientific goals and open questions presented in the companion articles of this volume. Also included are their related investigations (observations & modeling) and discussion of which measurements and future data products are needed to better constrain Venus’ atmosphere, climate, surface, interior and habitability evolution through time. A new fleet of Venus missions has been selected, and new mission concepts will continue to be considered for future selections. Missions under development include radar-equipped ESA-led EnVision M5 orbiter mission (European Space Agency 2021), NASA-JPL’s VERITAS orbiter mission (Smrekar et al. 2022a), NASA-GSFC’s DAVINCI entry probe/flyby mission (Garvin et al. 2022a). The data acquired with the VERITAS, DAVINCI, and EnVision from the end of this decade will fundamentally improve our understanding of the planet’s long term history, current activity and evolutionary path. We further describe future mission concepts and measurements beyond the current framework of selected missions, as well as the synergies between these mission concepts, ground-based and space-based observatories and facilities, laboratory measurements, and future algorithmic or modeling activities that pave the way for the development of a Venus program that extends into the 2040s (Wilson et al. 2022)

    Volatiles in the atmosphere of Mars: The effects of volcanism and escape constrained by isotopic data

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    International audienceWe study the long term evolution of the conditions on the surface of Mars through the modeling of the effects of volcanic degassing and atmospheric non-thermal escape during the last four billion yr. We propose to use the recent advances due to observation and modeling to constrain possible evolutions of the atmosphere of Mars with the help of isotopic data from carbon, nitrogen and argon. The history of argon is studied through direct calculation of its degassing and escape, whereas, for other species, the analysis is an integration backwards in time from present-day situation. In our calculation, we do not consider early impact erosion, hydrodynamic escape or carbonate formation.Volcanic degassing is obtained from crust production models, observation of the surface, and realistic volatile contents of the lavas. ASPERA (Analyzer of Space Plasma and EneRgetic Atoms) measurements and modeling of the escape rates produced by ionic escape, sputtering and dissociative recc mbination constitute the sink of volatiles. We constrain the maximum escape flux of CO2 with the evolution of argon and the Ar-40/Ar-36 ratio in the atmosphere and measurements of the present-day situation. This imposes restricted escape flux, consistent with the recent lowering of the expected escape efficiency on Mars. Our model is able to reproduce present day Ar-36 abundance and Ar-40/Ar-36 ratio. We also show that the present-day atmosphere of Mars is likely to be constituted by a large part of volcanic gases. With a low CO2 concentration in the magma (150 ppm), present atmosphere is constructed of 50% of volcanic gases emitted since 3.7 billion yr ago. We oppose this "late" volcanic atmosphere to the "early" atmosphere, in place during Noachian and composed of primitive volatile brought during accretion, magma ocean phase and pre 3.7 Ga volcanism. Likewise, the mean age of the atmosphere is estimated to be no more than 1.9 to 2.3 billion yr. Atmospheric pressures and variations on Mars are predicted to be low (50 mbar), as the result of degassing and non-thermal escape. This seems in line with the assumption of a big loss of volatiles during the first 500 Myr. Isotopic ratios lead us to propose that nitrogen is probably old in the Martian atmosphere and has been subjected to the fractionation of atmospheric escape. The C-12/C-13, on the other hand is more stable and indicates that carbon is younger. Water could have existed on Mars through the last 4 billion yr evolution within a factor of 1.6 times greater to 3 times less than the present-day inventory including polar caps, depending on the volcanic degassing. It is however unlikely to reside in the atmosphere or in liquid form unless large scale perturbations occur (changes in obliquity and large input of greenhouse gases due to a short burst of volcanism). (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved

    Late Veneer collisions and their impact on the evolution of Venus (PS Division Outstanding ECS Award Lecture)

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    International audienceDuring the end of the accretion, the so-called Late Veneer phase, while the bulk of the mass of terrestrial planets is already in place, a substantial number of large collisions can still occur. Those impacts are thought to be responsible for the repartition of the Highly Siderophile Elements. They are also susceptible to have a strong effect on volatile repartition and mantle convection. We study how Late Veneer impacts modify the evolution of Venus and its atmosphere, using a coupled numerical simulation. We focus on volatile exchanges and their effects on surface conditions. Mantle dynamics, volcanism and degassing processes lead to an input of gases in the atmosphere and are modeled using the StagYY mantle convection code. Volatile losses are estimated through atmospheric escape modeling. It involves two different aspects: hydrodynamic escape (0-500 Myr) and non-thermal escape. Hydrodynamic escape is massive but occurs only when the solar energy input is strong. Post 4 Ga escape from non-thermal processes is comparatively low but long-lived. The resulting state of the atmosphere is used to the calculate greenhouse effect and surface temperature, through a one-dimensional gray radiative-convective model. Large impacts are capable of contributing to (i) atmospheric escape, (ii) volatile replenishment and (iii) energy transfer to the mantle. We test various impactor compositions, impact parameters (velocity, location, size, and timing) and eroding power. Scenarios we tested are adapted from numerical stochastic simulations (Raymond et al., 2013). Impactor sizes are dominated by large bodies (R>500 km). Erosion of the atmosphere by a few large impacts appears limited. Swarms of smaller more mass-effective impactors seem required for this effect to be significant. Large impactors have two main effects on the atmosphere. They can (i) create a large input of volatile from the melting they cause during the impact and through the volatiles they carry. This leads to an increase in atmosphere density and surface temperatures. However, early impacts can also (ii) deplete the mantle of Venus and (assuming strong early escape) ultimately remove volatiles from the system, leading to lower late degassing and lower surface temperatures. The competition between those effects depends on the time of the impact, which directly governs the strength of atmospheric losses

    Late Veneer collisions and their impact on the evolution of Venus (PS Division Outstanding ECS Award Lecture)

    No full text
    During the end of the accretion, the so-called Late Veneer phase, while the bulk of the mass of terrestrial planets is already in place, a substantial number of large collisions can still occur. Those impacts are thought to be responsible for the repartition of the Highly Siderophile Elements. They are also susceptible to have a strong effect on volatile repartition and mantle convection. We study how Late Veneer impacts modify the evolution of Venus and its atmosphere, using a coupled numerical simulation. We focus on volatile exchanges and their effects on surface conditions. Mantle dynamics, volcanism and degassing processes lead to an input of gases in the atmosphere and are modeled using the StagYY mantle convection code. Volatile losses are estimated through atmospheric escape modeling. It involves two different aspects: hydrodynamic escape (0-500 Myr) and non-thermal escape. Hydrodynamic escape is massive but occurs only when the solar energy input is strong. Post 4 Ga escape from non-thermal processes is comparatively low but long-lived. The resulting state of the atmosphere is used to the calculate greenhouse effect and surface temperature, through a one-dimensional gray radiative-convective model. Large impacts are capable of contributing to (i) atmospheric escape, (ii) volatile replenishment and (iii) energy transfer to the mantle. We test various impactor compositions, impact parameters (velocity, location, size, and timing) and eroding power. Scenarios we tested are adapted from numerical stochastic simulations (Raymond et al., 2013). Impactor sizes are dominated by large bodies (R>500 km). Erosion of the atmosphere by a few large impacts appears limited. Swarms of smaller more mass-effective impactors seem required for this effect to be significant. Large impactors have two main effects on the atmosphere. They can (i) create a large input of volatile from the melting they cause during the impact and through the volatiles they carry. This leads to an increase in atmosphere density and surface temperatures. However, early impacts can also (ii) deplete the mantle of Venus and (assuming strong early escape) ultimately remove volatiles from the system, leading to lower late degassing and lower surface temperatures. The competition between those effects depends on the time of the impact, which directly governs the strength of atmospheric losses

    The environmental effects of very large bolide impacts on early Mars explored with a hierarchy of numerical models

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    International audienceThe origin of the presence of geological and mineralogical evidence that liquid water flowed on the surface of early Mars is now a 50-year-old mystery. It has been proposed (Segura et al., 2002, 2008, 2012) that bolide impacts could have triggered a long-term climate change, producing precipitation and runoff that may have altered the surface of Mars in a way that could explain (at least part of) this evidence. Here we use a hierarchy of numerical models (a 3-D Global Climate Model, a 1-D radiative-convective model and a 2-D Mantle Dynamics model) to test that hypothesis and more generally explore the environmental effects of very large bolide impacts (Dimpactor > 100 km, or Dcrater > 600 km) on the atmosphere, surface and interior of early Mars.Using a combination of 1-D and 3-D climate simulations, we show that the environmental effects of the largest impact events recorded on Mars are characterized by: (i) a short impact-induced warm period (several tens of Earth years for the surface and atmosphere to be back to ambient conditions after very large impact events); (ii) a low amount of hydrological cycling of water (because the evaporation of precipitation that reached the ground is extremely limited). The total cumulative amount of precipitation (rainfall) can be reasonably well approximated by the initial post-impact atmospheric reservoir of water vapour (coming from the impactor, the impacted terrain and from the sublimation of permanent ice reservoirs heated by the hot ejecta layer); (iii) deluge-style precipitation (∌2.6 m Global Equivalent Layer of surface precipitation per Earth year for our reference simulation, quantitatively in agreement with previous 1-D cloud free climate calculations of Segura et al., 2002), and (iv) precipitation patterns that are uncorrelated with the observed regions of valley networks.However, we show that the impact-induced stable runaway greenhouse state predicted by Segura et al. (2012) should not be achievable if convection and water vapour condensation processes are considered. We nevertheless confirm the results of Segura et al. (2008) and Urata and Toon (2013) that water ice clouds could in theory significantly extend the duration of the post-impact warm period, and even for cloud coverage significantly lower than predicted in Ramirez and Kasting (2017). However, the range of cloud microphysical properties for which this scenario works is very narrow.Using 2-D Mantle Dynamics simulations we find that large bolide impacts can produce a strong thermal anomaly in the mantle of Mars that can survive and propagate for tens of millions of years. This thermal anomaly could raise the near-surface internal heat flux up to several hundreds of mW/m2 (i.e. up to ∌10 times the ambient flux) for several millions years at the edges of the impact crater. However, such internal heat flux is largely insufficient to keep the martian surface above the melting point of water.In addition to the poor temporal correlation between the formation of the largest basins and valley networks (Fassett and Head, 2011), these arguments indicate that the largest impact events are unlikely to be the direct cause of formation of the Noachian valley networks. Our numerical results support instead the prediction of Palumbo and Head (2018) that very large impact-induced rainfall could have caused degradation of large craters, erased small craters, and formed smooth plains, potentially erasing much of the previously visible morphological surface history. Such hot rainfalls may have also led to the formation of aqueous alteration products on Noachian-aged terrains, which is consistent with the timing of formation of clays

    Geoscience for Understanding Habitability in the Solar System and Beyond

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    This paper reviews habitability conditions for a terrestrial planet from the pointof view of geosciences. It addresses how interactions between the interior of a planet ora moon and its atmosphere and surface (including hydrosphere and biosphere) can affecthabitability of the celestial body. It does not consider in detail the role of the central star butfocusses more on surface conditions capable of sustaining life. We deal with fundamental issues of planetary habitability, i.e. the environmental conditions capable of sustaining life,and the above-mentioned interactions can affect the habitability of the celestial body.We address some hotly debated questions including:– How do core and mantle affect the evolution and habitability of planets?– What are the consequences of mantle overturn on the evolution of the interior and atmo-sphere?– What is the role of the global carbon and water cycles?– What influence do comet and asteroid impacts exert on the evolution of the planet?– How does life interact with the evolution of the Earth’s geosphere and atmosphere?– How can knowledge of the solar system geophysics and habitability be applied to exo-planets?In addition, we address the identification of preserved life tracers in the context of theinteraction of life with planetary evolutio

    The Habitability of Venus and a Comparison to Early Earth

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    Venus today is inhospitable at the surface, its average temperature of 750 K being incompatible to the existence of life as we know it. However, the potential for past surface habitability and upper atmosphere (cloud) habitability at the present day is hotly debated, as the ongoing discussionregarding a possible phosphine signature coming from the clouds shows. We review current understanding about the evolution of Venus with special attention to scenarios where the planet may have been capable of hosting microbial life. We compare the possibility of past habitability on Venus to the case of Earth by reviewing the various hypotheses put forth concerning the origin of habitable conditions and the emergence and evolution of plate tectonics on both planets. Life emerged on Earth during the Hadean when the planet was dominated by higher mantle temperatures (by about 200◩C), an uncertain tectonic regime that likely included squishy lid/plume-lid and plate tectonics, and proto continents. Despite the lack of well-preserved crust dating from the Hadean-Paleoarchean eons, we attempt to resume current understanding of the environmental conditions during this critical period based on zircon crystals and geochemical signatures from this period, as well as studies of younger, relatively well-preserved rocks from the Paleoarchean. For these early, primitive life forms, the tectonic regime was not critical but it became an important means of nutrient recycling, with possible consequences to the global environment on the long-term, that was essential to the continuation of habitability and the evolution of life. For early Venus, the question of stable surface water is closely related to tectonics. We discuss potential transitions between stagnant lid and (episodic) tectonics with crustal recycling, as well as consequences for volatile cycling between Venus’ interior and atmosphere. In particular, we review insights into Venus’ early climate and examine critical questions about early rotation speed, reflective clouds, and silicate weathering, and summarize implications for Venus’ long-term habitability. Finally, the state of knowledge of the venusian clouds and the proposed detection of phosphine is covered
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