What if Mars were a Stranger (Thing)?

Title: Mars as an Exoplanet: Lessons from a Planet at the Edge of Habitability

Authors: Stephen R. Kane, Paul K. Byrne, Skylar D’Angiolillo, Michelle L. Hill, Emma L. Miles, David A. Brain, Shannon M. Curry, Joana R.C. Voigt

First Author’s Institution: Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Riverside, CA, USA

Status: Accepted to Planetary Science Journal [open access]

Mars in the Upside Down

If you’re a fan of Stranger Things like me, you’ll know of the Upside Down: a mirror world similar to our own, but with very different rules. Imagine Mars in the Upside Down, where it is no longer our next-door neighbor but a planet hundreds of light-years away. An astronomer on this Upside Down Earth would be looking at a distant speck with a transit signal barely distinguishable from noise. In this world, Mars would no longer be familiar but completely foreign, with unknown properties. Kane et al. suggest that treating Mars as if it were a stranger is a useful way to think about exoplanet science today. 


The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is hunting for atmospheres on small rocky planets around other stars. However, only a select few Mars-like exoplanets have been discovered. This is because sub-Earth planets are small and hard to detect, testing the bounds of current technology. The ones that have been discovered, such as TRAPPIST-1h and Kepler-138b, were detected due to favorable geometry. They happen to orbit very close to a low-mass star or sit in resonant multi-planet systems, which amplify the signal we are looking for. True Mars analogs with low flux and moderate orbital periods remain out of reach. This is precisely what makes Mars itself so important scientifically—it is the only planet of this type we can study up close.

Figure 1: A plot of confirmed exoplanets by mass and radius. Most confirmed exoplanets are larger and more massive than Earth. Mars-like planets (dots in the blue box) are rare in confirmed exoplanet detections. (Figure 2 in the paper)

Getting to Know Mars, Getting to Know All About Mars

We know a lot about Mars in comparison to other planets thanks to rovers (Curiosity and Perseverance), atmospheric orbiters (MAVEN and MOM), and other science missions. We know it once had water features with neutral pH and favorable chemistry for life from sedimentary evidence at the Gale and Jezero craters. We know its atmosphere is 95% CO2 with a surface pressure less than 1% of Earth’s. We know it once had an active magnetic dynamo, but it died out about 4 billion years ago, leading to solar wind steadily stripping away its atmosphere over time. 

But in the Upside Down, we would know none of this since Mars would be so distant. With current technology, this Upside Down Mars would be essentially undetectable using transit signals, radial velocity measurements, and spectrographs

Figure 2: Earth and Mars to scale, showing their internal structure and atmospheres. Despite being neighbors, Mars is dramatically smaller with a thin CO2 atmosphere, similar to the planets JWST is struggling to characterize. (Figure 1 in the paper)

Beyond our Backyard

JWST is currently studying the small rocky TRAPPIST-1 planets and is finding little evidence of atmospheres. The authors of today’s paper explore the idea that these exoplanets have similarities to Mars and perhaps are undergoing processes that strip away their atmospheres and create optimal conditions for life only for short durations. Using Mars as a blueprint, the authors show how we can better understand exoplanet processes, including volatile delivery and loss, photochemistry, climate evolution, obliquity forcing, planetary architecture, and intrinsic magnetism. For example, measurements of noble gases directly fingerprint Mars’ atmospheric escape process, and the authors argue these give us a calibration framework for interpreting future exoplanet spectra. 

The upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope’s microlensing survey will start revealing how common true Mars analogs actually are throughout the galaxy, while the future Habitable Worlds Observatory will attempt direct imaging of nearby candidates with unprecedented precision. Together, these missions will tell us whether Mars-like outcomes (brief habitability, catastrophic atmospheric loss, barren surfaces, etc.) are the default fate for small rocky planets. Interpreting that data will require the exact framework this paper builds: one grounded in the only Mars analog we can study in detail.

Astrobite edited by Sandy Chiu

Featured image credit: NASA, JPL 

Author

  • Ben Sherwin

    I am a Physics PhD student and NSF Graduate Research Fellow at Stanford University, working with Josh Frieman. I am interested in theoretical and observational cosmology, specifically in cross-correlations between the Cosmic Microwave Background and tracers of large-scale structure.

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