Thinking like Earthlings may have caused scientists to overlook the electrochemical effects of Martian dust storms.
On Earth, dust particles are viewed mainly in terms of their physical effects, like erosion. But, in exotic locales from Mars to Venus to Jupiterโs icy moon Europa, electrical effects can affect the chemical composition of a planetary bodyโs surface and atmosphere in a relatively short time, according to new research from Washington University in St. Louis.
โThis direction of scientific investigation has been largely overlooked in the past,โ said Alian Wang, research professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences in Arts & Sciences. โResearchers are used to thinking โinside the boxโ based on terrestrial experience.โ
Wangโs study in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets focuses on amorphous sulfur and chlorine salts found by the Curiosity rover at Gale crater on Mars. The chemical signature of these materials could have been induced by electrochemical processes during Martian dust activities in a relatively short geologic time frame: years to hundreds of years.

Low-strength electrostatic discharge causes electrochemical reactions that transform materials on the Martian surface, Wang explained, causing loss of crystallinity, removal of structural water and oxidation of certain elements like sulfur, chlorine and iron.
โThe collective chemical effect of electrostatic discharge can be significant,โ Wang said. โThis is the core idea of our new study.โ
The findings could inform science priorities for the next phase of Mars exploration missions, including NASAโs Perseverance rover, China National Space Administrationโs Tianwen-1 lander and rover, and the European Space Agencyโs ExoMars lander and rover.
โโExplore the subsurfaceโ is the suggestion that we would give to the next phase of Mars exploration missions,โ said Bradley Jolliff, the Scott Rudolph Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences and a co-author on the paper.
โThese missions are all seeking evidence for geological and hydrological evolution at their selected landing sites, and they are especially looking for and hoping to collect samples that contain traces of past biological activity,โ Jolliff said. โExploring the subsurface would enable sampling of ancient materials โ some of which might still be safekeeping precious biomarkers.โ
Read more on the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciencesโ website.
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