# Mars in the aftermath of a colossal impact

**Authors:** Jason Man Yin Woo, Hidenori Genda, Ramon Brasser, Stephen J. Mojzsis

arXiv: 1906.08904 · 2019-06-24

## TL;DR

This study uses simulations to explore how a giant impact by a Ceres-sized object could have delivered highly siderophile elements to Mars and generated a transient greenhouse atmosphere, influencing early Mars climate.

## Contribution

It provides a detailed analysis of impact fragmentation and HSE delivery, and models early atmospheric conditions resulting from impact-induced hydrogen release.

## Key findings

- 50% of impactor's core fragments into metallic hail
- HSE delivery is more efficient than previous collision models
- Early Mars could have had a transient 3-bar hydrogen greenhouse atmosphere

## Abstract

The abundance of highly siderophile elements (HSEs) inferred for Mars' mantle from martian meteorites implies a Late Veneer (LV) mass addition of ~0.8 wt% with broadly chondritic composition. Late accretion to Mars by a differentiated Ceres-sized (~1000 km diameter) object can account for part of the requisite LV mass, and geochronological constraints suggests that this must have occurred no later than ca. 4480 Ma. Here, we analyze the outcome of the hypothetical LV giant impact to Mars with smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations together with analytical theory. Results show that, in general about 50% of the impactor's metallic core shatters into ~10m fragments that subsequently fragment into sub-mm metallic hail at re-accretion. This returns a promising delivery of HSEs into martian mantle compared to either a head-on and hit-and-run collision; in both cases,<10% of impactor's core materials are fragmented and finally embedded in the martian mantle. Isotopic evidence from martian meteorites, and interpretations from atmospheric mapping data show that a global surface water reservoir could be present during the early Noachian (before ca. 4100 Ma). The millimeter-sized metal hail could thus react with a martian hydrosphere to generate ~3 bars of H2, which is adequate to act as a greenhouse and keep early Mars warm. Yet, we also find that this atmosphere is transient. It typically survives shorter than 3 Myr based on the expected extreme ultraviolet (EUV) flux of the early Sun; if the Sun was a slow rotator an accordingly weaker EUV flux could extend this lifetime to >10 Myr. A dense pre-Noachian CO2 atmosphere should lower the escape efficiency of hydrogen by IR emission. A more detailed hydrodynamic atmospheric model of this early hydrogen atmosphere is warranted to examine its effect on pre-Noachian Mars.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.08904