Mars' two-faced nature may have been caused by a giant kick
in the head, according to a new study.
Recent evidence suggests the vast disparity seen between the
northern and southern halves of the planet is caused by the long ago impact of
a gigantic space rock into Mars.
The finding, based on a survey of the red planet's gravity
and topography, provides the first convincing support for the idea that the red
planet is the site of the largest impact crater in our solar system. The
collision that caused the scar would have occurred more than 3.9 billion years
ago, the researchers said, around the time an even larger asteroid is thought
to have struck Earth, forming
our planet's moon.
"This impact is really one of the defining events in
Mars' history," said MIT postdoctoral researcher Jeffrey Andrews-Hanna,
who led the new study with MIT geophysicist Maria Zuber and NASA Jet Propulsion
Laboratory researcher Bruce Banerdt. "More than anything this has
determined the shape of the planet's surface. Mars would not be the planet it
is today if this hadn't occurred."
Two-faced planet
Scientists have been scratching their heads trying to
explain the differences between the two sides of Mars for about 30 years. The
northern hemisphere of the planet is smooth and low, and some experts think it
may have contained a
vast ocean long ago. Meanwhile, the southern half of the Martian surface is
rough and heavily-cratered, and about 2.5 miles to 5 miles (4 km to 8 km)
higher in elevation than the northern basin.
Scientists first proposed the idea of a space rock impact to
explain the difference in 1984, but for a long time this hypothesis had less support
in the field than a competing idea, that internal processes, such as the
convection of heat through the mantle, created the different features.
"In the past it has been thought that it just doesn't
look like an impact crater," Andrews-Hanna said. "The outline just
looked irregular, not circular."
By combining detailed topographical data from the Mars
Global Surveyor mission with measurements of the variations in the planet's
gravitational field made by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter satellite,
Andrews-Hanna and his team assembled a map of the Martian surface before
volcanic eruptions added layers and obscured the boundary between the
hemispheres. The map revealed a stunning elliptical basin shape covering about
40 percent of Mars' surface.
"This was a kind of surprising result," Andrews-Hanna
said. "What we noticed is that the dichotomy boundary around the planet
was actually smooth and regular. We tested to see if we could fit this with any
shape, and it just so happens that it's almost perfectly fitted by an ellipse.
There's only one process that's known to make an elliptical depression like
that, and that's a giant impact."
The discovery helps to overcome a major criticism of the space
rock impact suggestion, that there is not enough visual evidence to support it.
"This is the one thing that nobody had seen
before," Andrews-Hanna told SPACE.com. "One of the main
arguments against the giant impact hypothesis was that it doesn't look like an
impact basin, therefore that's not a good solution. Now we can say that all the
evidence we have available to us is pointing toward a giant impact. We can't
disprove the other hypotheses, but I think it becomes a challenge now for those
hypotheses to explain the feature."
The elliptical crater the study revealed is roughly 5,300
miles (8,500 km) across and 6,600 miles (10,600 km) long, about the size of the
combined area of Asia, Europe and Australia. That makes this crater about four
times larger than the next-biggest impact basins known, the Hellas basin on
Mars and the South Pole-Aitken basin on the moon.
Proof?
The research changes the debate about the two faces of Mars,
but doesn't settle the question forever.
"I think it's an important step forward, but it's not
the last word," said Jay Melosh, a planetary scientist at the Lunar and
Planetary Lab at the University of Arizona, who was not involved in the new
study. "It certainly makes the impact scenario look a lot more plausible
than it did before. It's a very strong argument in favor of the giant impact,
but there is still no proof."
In order to prove the features seen on Mars are the result
of a space rock smash and not some other event or process, scientists would
need to find rocks or minerals that could have formed only as the result of an
impact.
"If you have a big impact it changes the rocks in
characteristic ways," Melosh said. "Minerals like quartz are changed
into a form that only occurs at high pressure. It's that
kind of change we use on Earth to verify whether impact craters are caused
by an impact or something else. If they are right we should be able to find
evidence in Martian rocks."
This kind of test will have to wait a while until humans can
mount missions to Mars to search for these rocks. Scientists would probably
need a suite of samples returned from various areas on the planet to be sure,
Melosh said.
Modeling the impact
The map created by Andrews-Hanna and his colleagues will be published
in the June 26 issue of the journal Nature, along with two other papers
that support the Mars findings.
For the latter papers, two groups of researchers used
computer models to study the effects such an impact would have had on the
planet.
Caltech graduate student Margarita Marinova and planetary
scientists Oded Aharonson of Caltech and Erik Asphaug of the University of
California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) tested a series of theoretical space rocks
approaching Mars with various velocities, energies and sizes. The scientists
found that an asteroid about one-half to two-thirds the size of Earth's moon
striking Mars at an angle of 30 to 60 degrees could have produced a basin such
as the one mapped by Andrews-Hanna's team.
The results help address one of the other main objections to
the impact hypothesis — the suggestion that any space rock massive enough to
form such a large basin would have melted so much of the planet's surface that
all evidence of it would be erased.
"They found, contrary to what was previously thought,
that you don't produce that much melt," Andrews-Hanna said. "Most of
the melt gets contained in the basin."
Another computer model, by UCSC planetary scientist Francis
Nimmo, graduate student Shawn Hart, associate researcher Don Korycansky, and
Craig Agnor of Queen Mary University, London, complements these findings.
This group simulated the behavior of the Martian crust
during an impact and found that not only could an impact such as the one
proposed cause the differences seen in Mars' two halves, it could also explain
other features seen on the red planet, such as magnetic field anomalies found
in the Southern hemisphere.
Nimmo's model showed how shock waves from the impact on the northern
hemisphere would travel through the planet and disrupt the crust on the other
side, causing changes in the magnetic field.
"The impact would have to be big enough to blast the
crust off half of the planet, but not so big that it melts everything,"
Nimmo said. "We showed that you really can form the dichotomy that
way."