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  • {♫Intro♫}

  • The Curiosity rover has been hard at work

  • on Marsboth finding mysteries and trying

  • to solve them.

  • This is a detective story!

  • Last year it discovered that levels of methane

  • in the atmosphere were mysteriously changing.

  • And now our trusty rover has thrown us for a loop again:

  • changing levels of oxygen gas.

  • Scientists published their results last week

  • in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets,

  • and so far, they don't have a clear explanation for it.

  • Like the changing levels of methane, changing oxygen levels are likely caused by geologic

  • processesbut they could also potentially be a sign of life.

  • Either way, they'll probably tell us something we didn't know about the Red Planet.

  • Curiosity has spent the past three Martian yearsthat's five years on Earthin

  • Gale Crater, sniffing the Martian air.

  • It has a portable chemistry lab, called SAM, short for Sample Analysis at Mars, which measures

  • the types and amounts of gases in the atmosphere.

  • [Credit: NASA]

  • It also keeps track of how they change over time.

  • Unlike Earth, where the content of our atmosphere stays pretty constant, Mars's atmosphere

  • changes a lot.

  • Roughly 95% of Mars's super-thin atmosphere is carbon dioxide, and during the winter months,

  • some of the CO2 in the air deposits into dry ice at the poles.

  • [Credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin/J. Cowart]

  • As the air pressure drops in that region, other atmospheric gases rush into the area,

  • mixing everything up.

  • Come spring, that CO2 starts sublimating back into a gas.

  • The cycle repeats every half-year, on alternating poles.

  • But that cycle only affects the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.

  • After CO2, nitrogen and argon are the next-most common elements in Martian air, and according

  • to SAM, the number of those particles stays even across the seasons.

  • Weirdly enough, that's not the case for oxygen.

  • By the end of each spring, the amount of oxygen SAM measured in the atmosphere increased.

  • By fall, it fell to predicted levels, and in winter, the amount decreased.

  • This suggests that something on Mars is producing this oxygen gas, and then several months later,

  • something is removing it.

  • Scientists aren't yet sure how to explain this.

  • They've ruled out the possibility that CO2 might be splitting apart to create extra oxygen

  • gasit doesn't decompose fast enough.

  • And although solar radiation can sometimes break up molecules, they don't think that's

  • what's happening to the oxygen to explain its decrease.

  • So it's still a mystery!

  • And sadly, researchers think it's probably not aliens, and more likely the result of

  • some chemical reaction in the Martian soil.

  • For example, one experiment from the Viking landers in the late 1970s did show that soil

  • could release oxygen gas if it had enough heat and humidity.

  • [credit: NASA/JPL]

  • But it's not a perfect answerthat experiment was done in a completely different environment

  • than the Gale Crater, and it still can't explain where the oxygen goes after summertime.

  • The answer could be related to whatever is causing the rise and fall of methane levels,

  • but the two cycles don't always line up.

  • So they might be two completely different puzzles.

  • The good news is Curiosity is on the case!

  • [Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS] It's still collecting data, and maybe after

  • a few more rounds of seasons, it'll have our answer.

  • TOC Switch

  • In the meantime, other researchers have been hard at work trying to get to the bottom of

  • a mystery a little farther out in the solar system.

  • Specifically, they're trying to figure out how a tiny moon of Saturn got its unusual

  • stripes.

  • The moon, Enceladus, has a set of tiger stripesyes, that's actually what astronomers nicknamed

  • themaround its south pole.

  • [Credit: ]

  • These four stripes are about 130 KM long, and they run parallel to each other with about

  • 35 KM in between.

  • They're basically fissures: long cracks in Enceladus's surface that connect the

  • moon's subsurface ocean with the void of space.

  • And that's cool for us, because water and other molecules shoot out of the fissures

  • into space, which means spacecraft can study them to find out what's going on down there.[Credit:

  • NASA/JPL-Caltech]

  • Alt:https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/video/details.php?id=1458 Alt:https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/video/details.php?id=1404

  • But as useful as they are, we still don't really understand them.

  • We don't know how they formed, why they're so parallel, or why they're only on one

  • part of the moon.

  • And only on one moon that we know of, for that matter.

  • [NASA/JPL-Caltech]

  • But earlier this month, researchers presented one hypothesis.

  • They suggested that the stripes actually formed because of the moon's relationship with

  • Saturn.

  • We already knew that as Enceladus orbits Saturn, the gas giant's gravitational tug heats

  • up the moon's insides.

  • That's how this frigid moon manages to maintain a liquid ocean under its frozen surface.

  • NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

  • As this new hypothesis goes, the moon slowly cooled over a very long period of time.

  • As it cooled, the total amount of ice slowly increased, and pressure built up on the frozen

  • shell.

  • When it couldn't take it anymore, it cracked.

  • Since the ice is thinnest over the moon's south pole, this weak spot was the first to

  • give way under the weight of the shell.

  • That first crack relieved the pressure across the whole planet, keeping cracks from forming

  • anywhere else.

  • For now.

  • [Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech]

  • Once that fissure formed, ocean water would spew out of it into space.

  • For the most part, it wouldn't be traveling fast enough to escape the moon's gravity,

  • so it'd snow back down on either side of the stripe.

  • After enough timeanywhere from a hundred thousand to a million years—-the weight

  • from that new frozen water would cause more cracks to form, parallel to the original.

  • If it's right, this hypothesis would also explain why Enceladus is the only moon we

  • know of that has this stripey feature: it's one of the smallest moons with an underground

  • ocean.

  • On a larger moon, any stripes that formed wouldn't last; gravity would cause the fractured

  • ice to collapse and crush itself back into one piece.

  • It's a promising hypothesis, but it hasn't gone through peer review yet, so it'll be

  • a while before this hypothesis gets put to the test.

  • It's still possible that other geologic processes were involved.

  • But so far, it's done the best job of explaining this tiny moon's tiger stripes.

  • TOC OFF

  • It can take a while to get to the bottom of puzzles like these, but exploring space is

  • as much about finding the mysteries as it is about finding the answers.

  • A lot of times these puzzlesthe things that don't make senseare the things that

  • give us the most room to learn.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • This episode is brought to you by this week's President of Space: Matthew Brant.

  • Matthew is one of our patrons on Patreon, which is a group of amazing people helping

  • make science education free on the internet.

  • We couldn't make these videos without our patrons like Matthew Brant,

  • so thanks to all of you.

  • If you're not a patron yet but you're interested in learning more about how to support us,

  • you can go to patreon.com/scishow.

  • {♫Outro♫}

{♫Intro♫}

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