Shock Vaporization/Devolatilization of Evaporitic Minerals, Halite and Gypsum, in an Open System Investigated by a Two‐Stage Light Gas Gun

Geophysical Research Letters Volume 46 Issue 13 Page 7258-7267 published_at 2019-07-23
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Title ( eng )
Shock Vaporization/Devolatilization of Evaporitic Minerals, Halite and Gypsum, in an Open System Investigated by a Two‐Stage Light Gas Gun
Creator
Kurosawa Kosuke
Moriwaki Ryota
Komatsu Goro
Okamoto Takaya
Sakuma Hiroshi
Matsui Takafumi
Source Title
Geophysical Research Letters
Volume 46
Issue 13
Start Page 7258
End Page 7267
Abstract
Dry lakebeds might constitute large volatile reservoirs on Mars. Hypervelocity impacts onto ancient dry lakebeds would have affected the volatile distribution on Mars. We developed a new experimental method to investigate the response of evaporitic minerals (halite and gypsum) to impact shocks in an open system. This technique does not result in chemical contamination from the operation of the gas gun. The technique is termed the “two‐valve method,” and the gun system is located in the Planetary Exploration Research Center, Chiba Institute of Technology, Japan. We detected the vaporization of halite at 31 GPa and devolatilization from gypsum at 11 GPa, suggesting that impact‐induced volatile release from dry lakebeds has periodically occurred throughout Martian history. The vaporization of halite deposits might have enhanced the production of perchlorates, which are found globally on Mars. The water loss from gypsum possibly explains the coexisting types of Ca‐sulfates found in Gale Crater.
Descriptions
This work was supported by ISAS/JAXA as a collaborative program with its Hypervelocity Impact Facility.
Language
eng
Resource Type journal article
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
AGU
Date of Issued 2019-07-23
Rights
An edited version of this paper was published by AGU. Copyright 2019 American Geophysical Union.
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
[DOI] 10.1029/2019GL083249
[DOI] https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL083249
[ISSN] 0094-8276
[ISSN] 1944-8007
Remark Edited version/PDF may be used in an institutional repository after an embargo period of 6 months.