22 September 2014 sky & telescope
Winged Time Traveler
planetary scientists expected to fi nd widespread carbonate
deposits on Mars. But they haven’t.
Plus, although Mars possesses vast water-ice deposits
beneath its surface, deuterium levels suggest that the
planet has lost roughly 70% of its water.
If the atmosphere isn’t hiding underground, then
some of it must have been lost to space. Gas can escape
if it’s hot enough or if it’s stripped off by the blustery
solar wind. Thermal escape in particular favors the loss
of lighter molecules, because at a given temperature
a lighter molecule zips around faster than a heavier,
tortoise-like molecule.
Losing so much atmosphere would have left Mars
much colder and drier. Liquid water wouldn’t have
lasted on the surface. Geological features suggest that
Mars transitioned from warm and wet to cold and dry
by roughly 3 billion years ago. But scientists don’t know
exactly how long it took for the planet to lose most of its
atmosphere or why. That’s why they built MAVEN.
The Chronologists’ Tools
MAVEN’s time-travel abilities are limited: it won’t fl ash
back 4 billion years to watch the planet’s envelope dwindle
MAVEN’s Science Instruments
Remote Sensing Package IUVS
Imaging Ultraviolet
Spectrometer
Mass Spectrometry NGIMS
Instrument^ Neutral Gas & Ion Mass
Spectrometer
Particles & Fields Package SEP
Solar Energetic Particles
S TATIC
SupraThermal & Thermal
Ion Composition
SWEA
Solar Wind Electron Analyzer
SWIA
Solar Wind Ion Analyzer
LPW
Langmuir Probe & Waves
MAG
Magnetometer
Studies
ionospheric/
atmospheric
profiles
LPW
STATIC
NGIMS
IUVS Limb
Scans
Continuously
measures non-thermal
ions and electrons, magnetic field
Electric Field
LPW Line of solar occultation
Line of solar occultation
STATIC
monitors
escape
IUVS
coronal
scans
IUVS
Atmosphere
disk maps
Measures extreme Pileup of solar magnetic field
UV continuously
when in sunlight
SWIA
STATIC
SWEA
SEP
MAG
Solar
Wind
Above: The MAVEN spacecraft will follow an elongated orbit
around Mars, dipping down to 150 km (in some places 125 km)
above the surface at its closest and fl ying 6,000 km above at its far-
thest. The orbit precesses in both latitude and local solar time so
that scientists can study as much of near-Mars space as possible.
Shown are the investigations and pertinent instruments involved
for various parts of the spacecraft’s orbit.
Left: Technicians pack up the MAVEN orbiter in its launch cone.
Once wrapped up, the complete package sat on top of an Atlas V
rocket for launch (see page 26).
NASA / GSFC / SSLSolar Wind Electron Analyzer
NASA / KIM SHIFLETT
S&T
: LEAH TISCIONE, SOURCE: MAVEN TEAM
Maven_at_Mars.indd 22 6/23/14 12:17 PM