Iron Snow in the Martian Core?
Christopher Davies, and Anne Pommier

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether Mars' core could have crystallized from the top down via an iron snow regime, affecting its magnetic history, and finds that such a process is plausible under certain conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a new model for Martian core evolution considering top-down crystallization and evaluates its implications for Mars' magnetic history.
Findings
Snow zones can form for a wide range of properties.
Snow zones need to be at least 400 km thick to restart the dynamo.
Models suggest snow zones occupy about the top 100 km of the core.
Abstract
The decline of Mars' global magnetic field some 3.8-4.1 billion years ago is thought to reflect the demise of the dynamo that operated in its liquid core. The dynamo was probably powered by planetary cooling and so its termination is intimately tied to the thermochemical evolution and present-day physical state of the Martian core. Bottom-up growth of a solid inner core, the crystallization regime for Earth's core, has been found to produce a long-lived dynamo leading to the suggestion that the Martian core remains entirely liquid to this day. Motivated by the experimentally-determined increase in the Fe-S liquidus temperature with decreasing pressure at Martian core conditions, we investigate whether Mars' core could crystallize from the top down. We focus on the "iron snow" regime, where newly-formed solid consists of pure Fe and is therefore heavier than the liquid. We derive global…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
