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Effects of Water on the Density and Elevation of Tesserae on Venus

Authors :
A R Baker
J Semprich
S P Schwenzer
J Filiberto
R C Greenwood
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2024.

Abstract

While the current conditions on Venus are inhospitable, with surface temperatures of ~ 470 °C, pressures of 92 bars, and a CO<subscript>2</subscript> dominated atmosphere, early Venus may have had a more temperate climate with water on the surface. Water is not only crucial to understanding the habitability potential of Venus, but also has major implications for the tectonic regime and thermal evolution of a planet. Tesserae are believed to be the oldest exposed features on the surface of Venus and may have formed during a period with higher water content. Some of this water might have been preserved as hydrous minerals in the Venusian subsurface. The presence of these minerals has an effect on the density profiles and isostatic behaviour of the tesserae and therefore requires a more detailed investigation. Here we will present results of phase equilibria and isostasy modelling on a range of Tesserae-analogue rock compositions with varying water content and along a range of potential thermal gradients. We compare our results to anhydrous models performed previously under similar thermal regime to constrain the conditions (rock composition, thermal gradient, and water content) needed for tesserae stability.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
811073, , E-00078-01, , 124.18
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20230018333
Document Type :
Report