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Mars Soil Temperature and Thermal Properties from InSight HP^3 Data
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  • Tilman Spohn,
  • Christian Krause,
  • Matthew Golombeck,
  • Nils T Mueller,
  • Matthias Grott,
  • Joerg Knollenberg,
  • Ana-Catalina Plesa,
  • Doris Breuer,
  • Paul Morgan,
  • Valentin T. Bickel,
  • William Bruce Banerdt,
  • Suzanne E Smrekar
Tilman Spohn
Institute of Planetary Research

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Christian Krause
DLR Institute of Space Systems
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Matthew Golombeck
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Nils T Mueller
German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Planetary Research
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Matthias Grott
DLR Institute for Planetary Research
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Joerg Knollenberg
DLR Institute for Planetary Research
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Ana-Catalina Plesa
German Aerospace Center
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Doris Breuer
German Aerospace Center
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Paul Morgan
Colorado School of Mines
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Valentin T. Bickel
University of Bern
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William Bruce Banerdt
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
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Suzanne E Smrekar
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Abstract

Temperature is of primary importance for many physical properties in the Martian soil. We measured diurnal and annual soil (and surface) temperature variations using the NASA InSight Mars mission’s HP3 radiometer and thermal probe. At the depth of the probe of 0.5 - 36 cm, an average temperature of 217.5K was found varying by 5.3 - 6.7 K during a sol and by 13.2K during the seasons. The damping of the surface temperature variations in the soil were used to derive a thermal diffusivity of 2.30±0.03×10−8 m2/s for the depth range of the diurnal wave - thermal skin depth 2.5±0.04 cm - and 3.74±0.61×10−8 m2/s for that of the annual wave, with a thermal skin depth of 84±10 cm. The temperatures measured are conducive to the deliquesence of thin films of brines in the soil. These are of astrobiological interest and may explain the formation of the observed cemented duricrust.
01 Feb 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
02 Feb 2024Published in ESS Open Archive