Interviews: the martian water cycle and climate
Water on Mars
14 May 2008
Even in the clearest, bluest sky on Earth, there is still water vapour in our
atmosphere. If
you could condense all the water vapour out of the atmosphere above you, it
would form a
layer of water two centimetres deep. On Mars today, there is also water vapour
in the
atmosphere but it would create a layer just 10 micrometres thick.
As on Earth, this water is constantly moving through a cycle of condensation and
evaporation. When it condenses, it falls to the surface. When it evaporates, it
re-enters
the atmosphere and is blown by the winds around the planet before condensing and
starting the cycle over again. Regardless of the apparent paucity, the constant
movement
of water through the martian atmosphere has an important effect on the martian
climate.
Mars Express carries three instruments, PFS, SPICAM and OMEGA, which allow
planetary
scientists to study the water cycle of Mars in unprecedented detail. With their
ocean of
new data, scientists are building a multifaceted story of the martian water
cycle. It is
strikingly similar to Earth in some respects and exotically different in others.
