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Crustal structure observed by the InSight mission to Mars

Authors :
Doyeon Kim
Simon Stähler
Christian Boehm
Ved Lekic
Domenico Giardini
Savas Ceylan
John Clinton
Paul Davis
Cecilia Duran
Amir Khan
Brigitte Knapmeyer-Endrun
Ross Maguire
Mark Panning
Ana-Catalina Plesa
Nicholas Schmerr
Mark Wieczorek
Géraldine Zenhäusern
Philippe Lognonné
William Banerdt
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2023.

Abstract

After more than 4 Earth years of operation on the martian surface monitoring the planet’s ground vibrations, the InSight’s seismometer is now retired. Throughout the mission, analyses of body waves from marsquakes and impacts have led to important discoveries about the martian interior structure of the crust, mantle, and core. Recent detection of surface waves, together with gravimetric modeling enabled the characterization of crustal structure variations away from the InSight landing site and showed that average crustal velocity and density structure is similar between the northern lowlands and the southern highlands. Especially for the observed overtones and multi-orbiting surface waves in S1222a, we find the depth sensitivity expands down to the uppermost mantle close to 90 km. Furthermore, our 3D wavefield simulations show significantly broadened volumetric sensitivity of the higher-orbit surface waves. These new constraints obtained by our surface wave analyses provide an important opportunity not only to refine and verify our previous radially symmetric models of the planet’s interior structure but also to improve understanding of seismo-tectonic environments on Mars. Here, we summarize our recent effort in the analyses of surface waves on Mars and discuss the inferred crustal property and its global implications.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7f7448d6530ba60c3e02f3857c9b27e6