HomeScienceSolar 'cannonballs' stripped Mars' atmosphere and caused water loss, says NASA

Solar 'cannonballs' stripped Mars' atmosphere and caused water loss, says NASA

By analysing data from MAVEN’s three key instruments, the team mapped argon gas in Mars’ upper layers.

June 04, 2025 / 12:51 IST
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Solar 'cannonballs' stripped Mars' atmosphere and caused water loss, says NASA
Solar 'cannonballs' stripped Mars' atmosphere and caused water loss, says NASA

After years of silent flight above Mars, NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft has finally revealed a piece of the planet’s missing past. New findings suggest that a process called “sputtering” may be responsible for stripping away the Martian atmosphere, changing the planet’s history forever.

The study, published on 28 May in Science Advances, uses nearly a decade of MAVEN data to directly capture this process. Scientists have long believed sputtering played a major role in Mars’ climate shift, but this is the first time it’s been seen in action.

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Mars’ Atmosphere Slowly Peeled Away
Mars was once a wetter world. Scientists have long pointed to evidence like dried-up riverbeds and ancient lake basins. For that much water to exist, Mars would have needed a thicker atmosphere — one that could hold in heat and pressure.

But today, Mars is cold, dry, and barely has any air. That shift likely happened as the sun’s charged particles — known as solar wind — stripped gas from the Martian sky. The key method, scientists say, was sputtering. This happens when heavy solar ions smash into Mars’ upper atmosphere. Those hits knock lighter atoms free and fling them into space.