How to Give Mars an Atmosphere, Maybe

The Many Worlds site has been down for almost two weeks following the crash of the server used to publish it.  We never expected it would take quite this long to return to service, but now we are back with a column today and another one for early next week.

An artist rendering of what Mars might look like over time if efforts were made to give it an artificial magnetic field to then enrich its atmosphere and made it more hospitable to human explorers and scientists. (NASA)

Earth is most fortunate to have vast webs of magnetic fields surrounding it. Without them, much of our atmosphere would have been gradually torn away by powerful solar winds long ago, making it unlikely that anything like us would be here.

Scientists know that Mars once supported prominent magnetic fields as well, most likely in the early period of its history when the planet was consequently warmer and much wetter. Very little of them is left, and the planet is frigid and desiccated.

These understandings lead to an interesting question: if Mars had a functioning magnetosphere to protect it from those solar winds, could it once again develop a thicker atmosphere, warmer climate and liquid surface water?

James Green, director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division, thinks it could. And perhaps with our help, such changes could occur within a human, rather than an astronomical, time frame.

In a talk at the NASA Planetary Science Vision 2050 Workshop at the agency’s headquarters, Green presented simulations, models, and early thinking about how a Martian magnetic field might be re-constituted and the how the climate on Mars could then become more friendly for human exploration and perhaps communities.

It consisted of creating a “magnetic shield” to protect the planet from those high-energy solar particles. The shield structure would consist of a large dipole—a closed electric circuit powerful enough to generate an artificial magnetic field.

Simulations showed that a shield of this sort would leave Mars in the relatively protected magnetotail of the magnetic field created by the object. A potential result: an end to largescale stripping of the Martian atmosphere by the solar wind, and a significant change in climate.

“The solar sytstem is ours, let’s take it,” Green told the workshop. “And that, of course, includes Mars. But for humans to be able to explore Mars, together with us doing science, we need a better environment.”

 

An artificial magnetosphere of sufficient size generated at L1 – a point where the gravitational pull of Mars and the sun are at a rough equilibrium — allows Mars to be well protected by what is known as the magnetotail. The L1 point for Mars is about 673,920 miles (or 320 Mars radii) away from the planet. In this image, Green’s team simulated the passage of a hypothetical extreme Interplanetary Coronal Mass Ejection at Mars. By staying inside the magnetotail of the artificial magnetosphere, the Martian atmosphere lost an order of magnitude less material than it would have otherwise. (J. Green)

Is this “terraforming,” the process by which humans make Mars more suitable for human habitation? That’s an intriguing but controversial idea that has been around for decades, and Green was wary of embracing it fully.

“My understanding of terraforming is the deliberate addition, by humans, of directly adding gases to the atmosphere on a planetary scale,” he wrote in an email.

“I may be splitting hairs here, but nothing is introduced to the atmosphere in my simulations that Mars doesn’t create itself. In effect, this concept simply accelerates a natural process that would most likely occur over a much longer period of time.”

What he is referring to here is that many experts believe Mars will be a lot warmer in the future, and will have a much thicker atmosphere, whatever humans do. On its own, however, the process will take a very long time.

To explain further, first a little Mars history.

Long ago, more than 3.5 billion years in the past, Mars had a much thicker atmosphere that kept the surface temperatures moderate enough to allow for substantial amounts of surface water to flow, pool and perhaps even form an ocean. (And who knows, maybe even for life to begin.)

But since the magnetic field of Mars fell apart after its iron inner core was somehow undone, about 90 percent of the Martian atmosphere was stripped away by charged particles in that solar wind, which can reach speeds of 250 to 750 kilometers per second.

Mars, of course, is frigid and dry now, but Green said the dynamics of the solar system point to a time when the planet will warm up again.

James Green, the longtime director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division. (NASA)

He said that scientists expect the gradually increasing heat of the sun will warm the planet sufficiently to release the covering of frozen carbon dioxide at the north pole, will start water ice to flow, and will in time create something of a greenhouse atmosphere. But the process is expected to take some 700 millon years.

“The key to my idea is that we now know that Mars lost its magnetic field long ago, the solar wind has been stripping off the atmosphere (in particular the oxygen) ever since, and the solar wind is in some kind of equilibrium with the outgassing at Mars,” Green said. (Outgassing is the release of gaseous compounds from beneath the planet’s surface.)

“If we significantly reduce the stripping, a new, higher pressure atmosphere will evolve over time. The increase in pressure causes an increase in temperature. We have not calculated exactly what the new equilibrium will be and how long it will take.”

The reason why is that Green and his colleagues found that they needed to add some additional physics to the atmospheric model, dynamics that will become more important and clear over time. But he is confident those physics will be developed.

He also said that the European Space Agency’s Trace Gas Orbiter now circling Mars should be able to identify molecules and compounds that could play a significant role in a changing Mars atmosphere.

So based on those new magnetic field models and projections about the future climate of Mars, when might it be sufficiently changed to become significantly more human friendly?

Well, a relatively small change in atmospheric pressure can stop an astronaut’s blood from boiling, and so protective suits and clothes would be simpler to design. But the average daily range in temperature on Mars now is 170 degrees F, and it will take some substantial atmospheric modification to make that more congenial.

Green’s workshop focused on what might be possible in the mid 21st century, so he hopes for some progress in this arena by then.

This image combines depicts an orbital view of the north polar region of Mars, based on data collected from two instruments aboard NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor, depicts an orbital view of the north polar region of Mars. About 620 miles across, the white sections are primarily water ice. Frozen carbon dioxide accumulates as a comparatively thin layer about one meter thick on the north cap in the northern winter only. NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

One of many intriguing aspects of the paper is its part in an NASA effort to link fundamental models together for everything from predicting global climate to space weather on Mars.

The modeling of a potential artificial magnetosphere for Mars relied, for instance, on work done by NASA heliophysics – the quite advanced study of our own sun.

Chuanfei Dong, an expert on space weather at Mars, is a co-author on the paper and did much of the modeling work. He is now a postdoc at Princeton University, where he is supported by NASA.

He used the Block-Adaptive-Tree Solar-Wind Roe-Type Upwind Scheme (BATS-R-US) model to test the potential shielding effect of an artificial magnetosphere, and found that it was substantial when the magnetic field created was sufficiently strong.  Substantial enough, in fact, to greatly limit the loss of Martian atmosphere due to the solar wind.

As he explained, the artificial dipole magnetic field has to rotate to prevent the dayside reconnection, which in turn prevents the nightside reconnection as well.

If the artificial magnetic field does not block the solar winds properly, Mars could lose more of its atmosphere. That why the planet needs to be safely within the magnetotail of the artificial magnetosphere.

In their paper, the authors acknowledge that the plan for an artificial Martian magnetosphere may sound “fanciful,” but they say that emerging research is starting to show that a miniature magnetsphere can be used to protect humans and spacecraft.

In the future, they say, it is quite possible that an inflatable structure can generate a magnetic dipole field at a level of perhaps 1 or 2 Tesla (a unit that measures the strength of a magnetic field) as an active shield against the solar wind. In the simulation, the magnetic field is about 1.6 times strong than that of Earth.

 

A Mars with a magnetic field and consequently a thicker atmosphere would not likely be particularly verdant anytime soon. But it might make a human presence there possible.

As a summary of what Green and others are thinking, here is the “results” section of the short paper:

“It has been determined that an average change in the temperature of Mars of about 4 degrees C will provide enough temperature to melt the CO2 veneer over the northern polar cap.

“The resulting enhancement in the atmosphere of this CO2, a greenhouse gas, will begin the process of melting the water that is trapped in the northern polar cap of Mars. It has been estimated that nearly 1/7th of the ancient ocean of Mars is trapped in the frozen polar cap. Mars may once again become a more Earth-like habitable environment.

The results of these simulations will be reviewed (with) a projection of how long it may take for Mars to become an exciting new planet to study and to live on.”

 

6 Replies to “How to Give Mars an Atmosphere, Maybe”

  1. Kim Stanley Robinson has made the case for and against these ideas already. I think that the justification given for this not being terraforming is just splitting hairs. The proposal should stand or fall using the same general case as any other form of terraforming.

    Personally I am in favour of terraforming but we need to investigate our pristine mars first.
    However there will come a time when investigation will be over and action should then be instigated. Long after my days i’m afraid.

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  2. My main concern, other than this form seems to force me to use block letters, is There may be insufficient gases for a reasonable atmosphere. It is unclear to me why liberating CO2 from the north does not cause it freeze out in the southern winter, and vice versa. If you do heat it sufficiently to liberate water, frosts will raise the albedo and cool Mars. Water will dissolve CO2 and force it to react with iron oxides to make the ferric carbonate/bicarbonate. In my opinion, a useful atmosphere requires a reasonable amount of nitrogen, and that seems to be strangely absent. I believe some is there, underground, but chemically bound so it will not be easily accessible. It might be easier, s I suggested in a novel, to put a glass roof over a small crater and heat that.

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  3. Would it be possible to do the opposite for Venus by Increasing the solar winds to remove enough atmosphere to make it mare hospitable for life? If so could the removed atmospheric gases be directed towards Mars?

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  4. Not much on the actual Engineering that would produce such a magnetic machine. My thoughts on it would be; you could leverage the solar wind to induce a magnetic field in the machine. It would be handy if the core were low temperature superconductors wrapped around an Iron core so as to maximize the effect that the solar wind and solar magnetic field has on the machine. To make use of the solar wind, a stream of statically charged particles to induce a current in the machines core (probably some Nickel Iron Asteroid or a re-purposed Nickel Iron Asteroid) there would need to be a large coil to develop DC current. Of course a huge power plant would probably work better. Better yet are micro habitats on Mars. I think these grandiose ideas are better left to the far flung future when smoking too much green will result in ideas of transcending space and time lol.

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  5. “…many experts believe Mars will be a lot warmer in the future, and will have a much thicker atmosphere, whatever humans do.”

    It will be warmer in the future, no doubt. So will the Earth, to the point where the oceans evaporate. That will be caused by the Sun expanding, which every expert agrees it will do.

    Will it have a thicker atmosphere? Mars will still lack a magnetosphere so I cannot see how it will retain enough to thicken the atmosphere. Unless we are talking about that time when Mars, by virtue of solar expansion, finds itself in the Goldilocks Zone and can generate an atmosphere as quick as the solar winds strip it? Earth is already a charred mess by then so hardly our concern.

    Chris Hadfield was on the ISS for about 5 months and by his own admission felt thoroughly awful when he landed. That’s 5 months of low gravity. Until the various agencies start looking seriously at how to send humans to Mars and provide some form of gravity on the trip, along with shielding, a human return trip to Mars is probably impossible.

    I find it sad that I’m hearing this from the Planetary Science Division. This research should be coming out of space craft design teams, as a way of protecting the crew from solar radiation, not from a quick look at terraforming. And yes, it is terraforming, the definition of which ranges from planetary engineering, which this definitely is, to altering the planetary environment in order to make it capable of supporting terrestrial life forms, which is what this intends to do. You would think the director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division would have a slightly better grasp of what terraforming is, rather than just defend himself by saying “Well, my understanding is… “? He obviously didn’t research that too well.

    I have no idea what the budget of the NASA Planetary Sciences Division is, but I’d suggest there are better things to spend it on than researching this. NASA Planetary Science Vision 2050 Workshop? In 2 years it will be 50-years since the human race first landed on the moon. In 5 years it will be 50 years since the human race last went outside our own low orbit! Unless Mr Musk is serious, I believe the human race will still be confined to low orbit come 2050 (though the Chinese may surprise us all, land on the moon, permanently, and then just claim it. What could we do?)

    We need to get off of the Earth and out into the solar system, population and resource pressures will be a bigger driver than science, but we need to start looking at how human beings survive in space, not in orbit but actual space, rather than wasting time on sci-fi projects, like terraforming a planet that is 33.9 million miles (minimum) beyond our reach.

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