Dark fan-shaped deposits vs. bright fans in Australe Scopuli
In many locations throughout the image, fan-shaped deposits cover a large area with fans oriented in the direction of prevailing winds. The lengths of the fans range from tens of meters to several hundreds of meters. Two types of fans can be observed in the HRSC image: Dark fans that are result of transported fine-grained dark surface material and bright fans that indicate frost condensing from the CO2 gas. These seasonal polar fans are deposits from jets that ejected dust from the subsurface. Their formation is associated with “spiders” (araneiforms) [see HRSC PR April 2024 – Angustus Labyrinthus] and their activity is governed by solar radiation. When the sunlight penetrates through the translucent CO2 ice layer in early spring and warms up the underlying substrate, the sublimation temperature of the ice is quickly reached and pockets of pressurized gas start to form. Finally, the ice slab cracks releasing the gas and forming CO2 jets. The escaping gas entrains some of the loose material of the substrate and brings it up to the atmosphere where it is deposited on the upper surface of the seasonal ice. The results of this process can be observed as dark fans. After this first phase of activity where dark material is deposited onto the translucent top ice surface, a second phase kicks in, when the ice layer interacts with the dark material on it. Mars researchers believe, that the bright fans form either by recondensation of ice or that bright fans may also be produced from dark fans. When dark grains sink through the ice layer they absorb sunlight and warm the CO2 ice, which sublimates and leaves a hole. New CO2 frost recondensates on top of the sinking dark grains. This process results in a bright fan at the place of the dark. Another hypothesis is that the warmer dark dust at the surface creates a quick thermal jump in the ice-slab crystal which greatly decreases the transparency of the ice which then leads to a strong light reflection compared to the surrounding material. In general, the fans only develop during local spring until the complete (translucent) seasonal ice layer is sublimed from the surface and the fans become indistinguishable from the underlying surface.