Methane on Mars continues to be the subject of much debate, particularly because its generation mechanism remains unidentified. Regardless of its formation, methane could be stored in subsurface reservoirs such as clathrate hydrates. Their destabilization stimulated by pressure and temperature changes could be the source of the recent observations of martian methane. In this thesis work, a subsurface thermal model is first coupled with a thermodynamic model of clathrate hydrates in order to define global stability regions in the martian crust and to investigate methane trapping. Then, a diffusive-adsorptive model of gas transport is used to constrain the intensity, variation and duration of the surface flux resulting from shallow CH4 source...
214 O. Mousis et al. Abstract Thermodynamic conditions suggest that clathrates might exist on Mars. ...
We model the transport of gas through the martian subsurface in order to quantify the timescales of ...
International audienceThe origin of the martian methane is still poorly understood. A plausible expl...
International audienceRecent observations have evidenced traces of methane (CH4) heterogeneously dis...
During the whole geological history of Mars, methane formation mechanisms could have taken place in ...
Thermodynamic conditions prevailing on Mars favour clathrate formation from near subsurface to deep ...
International audienceThis paper deals with the stability of clahtrate hydrates at low temperature a...
International audienceThermodynamic conditions suggest that clathrates might exist on Mars. Despite ...
AbstractWe model the transport of gas through the martian subsurface in order to quantify the timesc...
Recent observations have evidenced traces of methane heterogeneously distributed in the Martian atmo...
Methane is a key molecule to understand the habitability of Mars due to its possible biological orig...
214 O. Mousis et al. Abstract Thermodynamic conditions suggest that clathrates might exist on Mars. ...
We model the transport of gas through the martian subsurface in order to quantify the timescales of ...
International audienceThe origin of the martian methane is still poorly understood. A plausible expl...
International audienceRecent observations have evidenced traces of methane (CH4) heterogeneously dis...
During the whole geological history of Mars, methane formation mechanisms could have taken place in ...
Thermodynamic conditions prevailing on Mars favour clathrate formation from near subsurface to deep ...
International audienceThis paper deals with the stability of clahtrate hydrates at low temperature a...
International audienceThermodynamic conditions suggest that clathrates might exist on Mars. Despite ...
AbstractWe model the transport of gas through the martian subsurface in order to quantify the timesc...
Recent observations have evidenced traces of methane heterogeneously distributed in the Martian atmo...
Methane is a key molecule to understand the habitability of Mars due to its possible biological orig...
214 O. Mousis et al. Abstract Thermodynamic conditions suggest that clathrates might exist on Mars. ...
We model the transport of gas through the martian subsurface in order to quantify the timescales of ...
International audienceThe origin of the martian methane is still poorly understood. A plausible expl...