
Scientists shocked by size of Mars’ liquid core
Interactive Video
•
Science, Physics, Geography
•
11th Grade - University
•
Hard
Wayground Content
FREE Resource
NASA scientists have used data from the seismology sensors on the InSight probe to understand Mars's internal structure. The probe has detected small quakes since 2019, revealing that Mars's crust is thinner than expected, ranging from 24 to 72 kilometers thick. The planet's core is larger than anticipated, with a radius of 1,830 kilometers, indicating a thinner mantle. This thin mantle likely cannot sustain the pressures needed for the mineral bridgmanite to stabilize, which on Earth blankets the core and slows heat loss. The absence of this mineral on Mars would have led to rapid cooling, initially allowing strong convection in the core and a global magnetic field. However, due to rapid cooling, Mars no longer has a global magnetic field today.
Read more
1 questions
Show all answers
1.
OPEN ENDED QUESTION
3 mins • 1 pt
What new insight or understanding did you gain from this video?
Evaluate responses using AI:
OFF
Access all questions and much more by creating a free account
Create resources
Host any resource
Get auto-graded reports

Continue with Google

Continue with Email

Continue with Classlink

Continue with Clever
or continue with

Microsoft
%20(1).png)
Apple
Others
Already have an account?