火星人
结壳
地质学
天体生物学
地震学
地球物理学
地球科学
火星探测计划
物理
作者
Brigitte Knapmeyer‐Endrun,M. P. Panning,Felix Bissig,Rakshit Joshi,Amir Khan,Doyeon Kim,V. Lekić,Benoît Tauzin,Saikiran Tharimena,Matthieu Plasman,Nicolas Compaire,R. García,Ludovic Margerin,Martín Schimmel,É. Stutzmann,N. C. Schmerr,E. Bozdağ,Ana‐Catalina Plesa,M. A. Wieczorek,A. Broquet
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2021-07-22
卷期号:373 (6553): 438-443
被引量:207
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.abf8966
摘要
Single seismometer structure Because of the lack of direct seismic observations, the interior structure of Mars has been a mystery. Khan et al. , Knapmeyer-Endrun et al. , and Stähler et al. used recently detected marsquakes from the seismometer deployed during the InSight mission to map the interior of Mars (see the Perspective by Cottaar and Koelemeijer). Mars likely has a 24- to 72-kilometer-thick crust with a very deep lithosphere close to 500 kilometers. Similar to the Earth, a low-velocity layer probably exists beneath the lithosphere. The crust of Mars is likely highly enriched in radioactive elements that help to heat this layer at the expense of the interior. The core of Mars is liquid and large, ∼1830 kilometers, which means that the mantle has only one rocky layer rather than two like the Earth has. These results provide a preliminary structure of Mars that helps to constrain the different theories explaining the chemistry and internal dynamics of the planet. Science , abf2966, abf8966, abi7730, this issue p. 434 , p. 438 , p. 443 see also abj8914, p. 388
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