Publication | Closed Access
Mantle convection and magma production on present‐day Mars: Effects of temperature‐dependent rheology
58
Citations
26
References
2007
Year
GeophysicsMagmatic ProcessVolcanologyMantle ConvectionMagma ProductionRecent VolcanismSolar ConvectionEngineeringNumerical SimulationsMantle DynamicMagmatismGeologySpace SciencesActivation EnergyEarth ScienceTemperature‐dependent RheologyMantle GeochemistryTectonics
Using recent volcanism on Mars as an important constraint, we explore the nature of present‐day mantle convection using numerical simulations with temperature‐dependent Arrhenius viscosity. Increasing the activation energy decreases both the magma production rate and the convective heat flux, while increasing the thermal Rayleigh number increases these quantities. For values of the activation energy inferred from lab studies of olivine, a thermal Rayleigh number (defined with a volume‐averaged viscosity) exceeding 2 · 10 6 best fits the observational constraints, including the recent volcanism rate and the range of melt fractions in the shergottites. The heat flux out of the core is low enough to avoid a magnetic dynamo, an important improvement over prior work. These results indicate that present‐day mantle convection on Mars remains relatively vigorous.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1