Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1781809 Planetary and Space Science 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Classified as a terrestrial planet, Venus, Mars, and Earth are similar in several aspects such as bulk composition and density. Their atmospheres on the other hand have significant differences. Venus has the densest atmosphere, composed of CO2 mainly, with atmospheric pressure at the planet's surface 92 times that of the Earth, while Mars has the thinnest atmosphere, composed also essentially of CO2, with only several millibars of atmospheric surface pressure. In the past, both Mars and Venus could have possessed Earth-like climate permitting the presence of surface liquid water reservoirs. Impacts by asteroids and comets could have played a significant role in the evolution of the early atmospheres of the Earth, Mars, and Venus, not only by causing atmospheric erosion but also by delivering material and volatiles to the planets. Here we investigate the atmospheric loss and the delivery of volatiles for the three terrestrial planets using a parameterized model that takes into account the impact simulation results and the flux of impactors given in the literature. We show that the dimensions of the planets, the initial atmospheric surface pressures and the volatiles contents of the impactors are of high importance for the impact delivery and erosion, and that they might be responsible for the differences in the atmospheric evolution of Mars, Earth and Venus.

Research highlights► Impacts of asteroids and comets influence the atmospheric mass of a planet. ► We elaborate a semi-analytical model of the atmospheric mass evolution upon impacts. ► Impact erosion efficiency varies following simulations in the literature. ► We use this model to compare the three planets Mars, Earth, and Venus. ► Parameters like initial pressure and planet mass influence erosion efficiency.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geophysics
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