Water in the Martian regolith from OMEGA/Mars Express
Joachim Audouard, Fran\c{c}ois Poulet, Mathieu Vincendon, Ralph E., Milliken, Denis Jouglet, Jean-Pierre Bibring, Brigitte Gondet, Yves, Langevin

TL;DR
This study analyzes the distribution and nature of water in the Martian surface materials using decade-long orbital NIR spectrometer data, revealing tightly-bound water and hydroxyl groups, with variations across latitudes and hemispheres.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive quantitative analysis of surface hydration on Mars, distinguishing between adsorbed water and structurally bound water, based on extensive spectral data and laboratory comparisons.
Findings
Water content of 4±1 wt.% in equatorial and mid-latitudes
Surface hydration increases with latitude and shows hemispheric asymmetry
Tightly-bound water and hydroxyl groups dominate surface hydration, not adsorbed water
Abstract
Here we discuss one of the current reservoirs of water on Mars, the regolith and rocks exposed at the surface. This reservoir is characterized by the presence of H_{2}O- and OH- bearing phases that produce a broad absorption at a wavelength of \sim 3 \mu m in near-infrared (NIR) reflectance spectra. This absorption is present in every ice-free spectrum of the Martian surface obtained thus far by orbital NIR spectrometers. We present a quantitative analysis of the global distribution of the 3 \mu m absorption using the Observatoire pour la Min\'eralogie, l\'\Eau, les Glaces et l\'\Activit\'e (OMEGA) imaging spectrometer that has been mapping the surface of Mars at kilometer scale for more than ten years. Based on laboratory reflectance spectra of a wide range of hydrous minerals and phases, we estimate a model-dependent water content of 4\pm 1 wt. \% in the equatorial and mid-latitudes.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
