Gardening of the Martian Regolith by Diurnal CO2 Frost and the Formation
of Slope Streaks
Lucas Lange
SSPA, Institut Supérieur de l’Aéronautique et de l’Espace (ISAE-SUPAERO), Université de Toulouse, 31400, Toulouse, France. Now at Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (LMD/IPSL), Sorbonne Université, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), École Polytechnique, École Normale Supérieure (ENS), Paris, France
Corresponding Author:[email protected]
Author ProfileAbstract
Before dawn on the dustiest regions of Mars, surfaces measured at or
below ∼ 148 K are common. Thermodynamics principles indicate that these
terrains must be associated with the presence of CO2 frost, yet visible
wavelength imagery does not display any ice signature. We interpret this
systematic absence as an indication of CO2 crystal growth within the
surficial regolith, not on top of it, forming hard-to-distinguish
intimate mixtures of frost and dust, i.e., dirty frost. This particular
ice/regolith relationship unique to the low thermal inertia regions is
enabled by the large difference in size between individual dust grains
and the peak thermal emission wavelength of any material nearing 148 K
(1-2 μm vs. 18 μm), allowing radiative loss (and therefore ice
formation) to occur deep within the pores of the ground, below several
layers of grains. After sunrise, sublimation-driven winds promoted by
direct insolation and conduction create an upward drag within the
surficial regolith that can be comparable in strength to gravity and
friction forces combined. This drag displaces individual grains,
possibly preventing their agglomeration, induration, and compaction, and
can potentially initiate or sustain downslope mass movement such as
slope streaks. If confirmed, this hypothesis introduces a new form of
CO2-driven geomorphological activity occurring near the equator on Mars
and explains how large units of mobile dust are currently maintained at
the surface in an otherwise soil-encrusting world.