There is plenty of geographical evidence that rivers periodically flowed across the planet's surface. Yet in the time period when these waters are supposed to have run - three to four billion years ago - Mars should have been too cold to support liquid water.
Researchers from the Harvard John A Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) in the US suggest that early Mars may have been warmed intermittently by a powerful greenhouse effect.
Four billion years ago, the Sun was about 30 per cent fainter than today and significantly less solar radiation and heat reached the Martian surface.
The scant radiation that did reach the planet was trapped by the atmosphere, resulting in warm, wet periods.
For decades, researchers have struggled to model exactly how the planet was insulated.
Carbon dioxide makes up 95 per cent of today's Martian atmosphere and is the most well-known and abundant greenhouse gas on Earth. However, CO2 alone does not account for Mars' early temperatures.
The atmospheres of rocky planets lose lighter gases, such as hydrogen, to space over time. The oxidation that gives Mars its distinctive hue is a result of the loss of hydrogen.
Researchers looked to these long-lost gases - known as reducing gases - to provide a possible explanation for Mars' early climate.
They looked at methane, which today is not abundant in the Martian atmosphere. However, billions of years ago, geological processes may have released more methane into the atmosphere.
This methane would have been slowly converted to hydrogen and other gases, in a process similar to that occurring today on Saturn's moon, Titan.
"We looked at what happens when methane, hydrogen and carbon dioxide collide and how they interact with photons. We found that this combination results in very strong absorption of radiation," said Wordsworth.
This is the first time scientists have been able to calculate its greenhouse effect accurately. It is also the first time that methane has been shown to be an effective greenhouse gas on early Mars.
The study was published in Geophysical Research Letters.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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