Aram Chaos and its constraints on the surface heat flux of Mars
Publication date
2011
Authors
Schumacher, S.
Zegers, T.E.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2011
Abstract
The surface heat flux of a planet is an important parameter to characterize its internal activity and to
determine its thermal evolution. Here we report on a new method to constrain the surface heat flux of
Mars during the Hesperian. For this, we explore the consequences for the martian surface heat flux from
a recently presented new hypothesis for the formation of Aram Chaos (Zegers, T.E., Oosthoek, J.H.P., Rossi,
A.P., Blom, J.K., Schumacher, S. [2010]. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 297, 496–504. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2010.
06.049.). In this hypothesis the chaotic terrain is thought to have formed by melting of a buried ice sheet.
The slow sedimentation and burial of the ice sheet led to an increased thermal insulation of the ice
and subsequently to a temperature increase high enough to trigger melting and the formation of the subsurface
lake. As these processes highly depend on the thermal properties of the subsurface and especially
on the surface heat flux, it is possible to constrain the latter by using numerical simulations. Based on the
hypothesis for the formation of Aram Chaos, we conducted an extensive parameter study to determine
the parameter settings leading to sufficient melting of the buried ice sheet. We find that the surface heat
flux in the Aram Chaos region during the Hesperian was most likely between 20 and 45mW m 2 with a
possible maximum value of up to 60mWm-2.
Keywords
Mars, Interior, Mars, Surface, Thermal histories, Geophysics