1. Venus water loss is dominated by HCO + dissociative recombination.
- Author
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Chaffin MS, Cangi EM, Gregory BS, Yelle RV, Deighan J, Elliott RD, and Gröller H
- Abstract
Despite its Earth-like size and source material
1,2 , Venus is extremely dry3,4 , indicating near-total water loss to space by means of hydrogen outflow from an ancient, steam-dominated atmosphere5,6 . Such hydrodynamic escape likely removed most of an initial Earth-like 3-km global equivalent layer (GEL) of water but cannot deplete the atmosphere to the observed 3-cm GEL because it shuts down below about 10-100 m GEL5,7 . To complete Venus water loss, and to produce the observed bulk atmospheric enrichment in deuterium of about 120 times Earth8,9 , nonthermal H escape mechanisms still operating today are required10,11 . Early studies identified these as resonant charge exchange12-14 , hot oxygen impact15,16 and ion outflow17,18 , establishing a consensus view of H escape10,19 that has since received only minimal updates20 . Here we show that this consensus omits the most important present-day H loss process, HCO+ dissociative recombination. This process nearly doubles the Venus H escape rate and, consequently, doubles the amount of present-day volcanic water outgassing and/or impactor infall required to maintain a steady-state atmospheric water abundance. These higher loss rates resolve long-standing difficulties in simultaneously explaining the measured abundance and isotope ratio of Venusian water21,22 and would enable faster desiccation in the wake of speculative late ocean scenarios23 . Design limitations prevented past Venus missions from measuring both HCO+ and the escaping hydrogen produced by its recombination; future spacecraft measurements are imperative., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)- Published
- 2024
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