论文标题
用气候循环加热火星:二氧化碳碰撞诱导的吸收的影响
Warming Early Mars with Climate Cycling: The Effect of CO2-H2 Collision-induced Absorption
论文作者
论文摘要
对于气候建模者来说,解释早期火星上表面液态水的证据一直是一个挑战,因为诺阿切时期的阳光降低了约30%。我们建议,二氧化碳碰撞诱导的吸收的其他温室强迫能够使表面温度高于冰点,并可以使早期火星陷入极限循环状态。当暴发较低并且二氧化碳速率超过二氧化碳速率无法与热风化期间的二氧化碳快速降低时,发生限制周期。该制度中的行星将在全球冰川和瞬态温暖气候阶段之间交替。这种机制能够解释火星记录中短暂温暖时期的地貌证据。先前的工作表明,碰撞诱导的CO2-H2吸收能够脱发早期的火星,但仅具有高H2的降压速率(大于〜600 Tmol/yr)和高表面压力(在3至4个bar之间)。我们使用了新的理论衍生的碰撞诱导的CO2-H2吸收系数来重新评估早期火星的气候极限循环假设。在我们的1维辐射对流模型中使用新的和更强的吸收系数以及我们的能量平衡模型,我们发现在300杆以下的表面压力下,H2循环的限制循环可以低至〜300 tmol/yr。我们的结果与早期火星表面压力和氢丰度的古帕拉梅特仪更加一致。
Explaining the evidence for surface liquid water on early Mars has been a challenge for climate modelers, as the sun was ~30% less luminous during the late-Noachian. We propose that the additional greenhouse forcing of CO2-H2 collision-induced absorption is capable of bringing the surface temperature above freezing and can put early Mars into a limit-cycling regime. Limit cycles occur when insolation is low and CO2 outgassing rates are unable to balance with the rapid drawdown of CO2 during warm weathering periods. Planets in this regime will alternate between global glaciation and transient warm climate phases. This mechanism is capable of explaining the geomorphological evidence for transient warm periods in the martian record. Previous work has shown that collision-induced absorption of CO2-H2 was capable of deglaciating early Mars, but only with high H2 outgassing rates (greater than ~600 Tmol/yr) and at high surface pressures (between 3 to 4 bars). We used new theoretically derived collision-induced absorption coefficients for CO2-H2 to reevaluate the climate limit cycling hypothesis for early Mars. Using the new and stronger absorption coefficients in our 1-dimensional radiative convective model as well as our energy balance model, we find that limit cycling can occur with an H2 outgassing rate as low as ~300 Tmol/yr at surface pressures below 3 bars. Our results agree more closely with paleoparameters for early martian surface pressure and hydrogen abundance.