BETA
THIS IS A BETA EXPERIENCE. OPT-OUT HERE

More From Forbes

Edit Story

Mars’ Small Mass Still Puzzles Planetary Scientists

Following

Mars remains a true puzzle, but not for the reasons most people would think. Sure, there's debate over whether it ever had surface water, oceans and life. But Mars’ small mass relative to earth and Venus have been a major conundrum that has plagued planetary scientists for decades.

Because the red planet’s mass is roughly only a tenth that of earth, it prompted Carnegie Institution planetary scientist George Wetherill to dub it the ‘small Mars’ problem. There have been several hypotheses to try and explain why Mars ended up so much smaller than earth and Venus. But when hard pressed, few planetary scientists are willing to go to the mat for any of them.

If there is enough material in the disk to grow something the size of earth and Venus, it’s not clear why there also wasn’t the same amount of material near Mars so that it might grow to be the same size, Matthew Clement, a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Lab in Maryland, told me via email.

Is Mars’ small mass the key to why the red planet could never hold on to its water and ultimately never remain habitable?

Mass is the single most fundamental property of a planet, Sean Raymond, an astrophysicist at the Bordeaux Astrophysical Laboratory in France, told me via email.

Mars' geological history and loss of water both stem in large part from its mass, he said.

Mass Matters

It certainly is a primary factor, along with its distance from the Sun, Stephen Kane, a planetary geophysicist at the University of California in Riverside, told me via email. Mars’ small size severely limited both the longevity of its geological and volcanic activity that replenished the atmosphere, he said. Its small mass also made it susceptible to being stripped of its atmosphere by the solar wind, said Kane.

Mars reached half its mass very early on in the history of our solar system.

Basically, whatever the source of the size difference between the two planets had to be in place very early on in the solar system’s history, probably within just a few million years, said Clement.

Why is Mars so different in mass than earth?

There are three leading hypotheses as to why.

The so-called Grand Tack Model features our very early Jupiter migrating inward toward the Sun before —- somewhat akin to the movement of a sailboat —- tacking back outward in the opposite direction. In the process, our young Jupiter disrupted the planetary building blocks that would have allowed Mars to form a larger mass planet.

Without Jupiter (and its migration), Mars may well have been the size of Venus and earth, or even bigger, Kane said.

The low-mass Main Asteroid Belt model in which Mars had very little material in its vicinity from which to grow larger in mass.

The early instability model in which the early inner solar system was basically such a chaotic, orbital mess that the building blocks for rocky planets beyond the orbit of earth and Venus were too perturbed to coalesce into any larger than Mars.

In truth, each of these hypotheses likely played a role in keeping Mars small. But it will likely take much more sampling of our solar system’s Main Asteroid Belt to pinpoint which, if any, of these ideas holds the most promise.

Why is solving this conundrum important?

The inner solar system contains four vastly different planets, and we still don’t really understand why, said Clement. Is it that something went wrong for Mars, he asked, or did something just fortuitously go right for the Earth?

ForbesMars Likely Never Had Any Sort Of Life, Says Renowned Geologist

Forming Planets Out Of Dust

Mars' small mass is just a byproduct of how the Solar System transformed dust into planets, said Raymond. Learning more about this process — through both theoretical modeling and continued observations of dust around young stars, where planetesimals are forming right now — is the future, he said.

The Bottom Line?

Our solar system’s architecture is rather unusual, particularly as only about 10% of solar type stars have a cold Jupiter, Kane said. It's therefore possible that most systems do allow the formation of numerous Venus and Earth-size planets beyond that which we see in the solar system, he said. This is potentially good for astrobiology since giant planets are relatively rare, said Kane.

ForbesWhy Mars Could Hold The Keys To Understanding Life Here On Earth
Follow me on Twitter or LinkedInCheck out my website or some of my other work here

Join The Conversation

Comments 

One Community. Many Voices. Create a free account to share your thoughts. 

Read our community guidelines .

Forbes Community Guidelines

Our community is about connecting people through open and thoughtful conversations. We want our readers to share their views and exchange ideas and facts in a safe space.

In order to do so, please follow the posting rules in our site's Terms of Service.  We've summarized some of those key rules below. Simply put, keep it civil.

Your post will be rejected if we notice that it seems to contain:

  • False or intentionally out-of-context or misleading information
  • Spam
  • Insults, profanity, incoherent, obscene or inflammatory language or threats of any kind
  • Attacks on the identity of other commenters or the article's author
  • Content that otherwise violates our site's terms.

User accounts will be blocked if we notice or believe that users are engaged in:

  • Continuous attempts to re-post comments that have been previously moderated/rejected
  • Racist, sexist, homophobic or other discriminatory comments
  • Attempts or tactics that put the site security at risk
  • Actions that otherwise violate our site's terms.

So, how can you be a power user?

  • Stay on topic and share your insights
  • Feel free to be clear and thoughtful to get your point across
  • ‘Like’ or ‘Dislike’ to show your point of view.
  • Protect your community.
  • Use the report tool to alert us when someone breaks the rules.

Thanks for reading our community guidelines. Please read the full list of posting rules found in our site's Terms of Service.