Nature Communications (Nov 2021)

The shallow structure of Mars at the InSight landing site from inversion of ambient vibrations

  • M. Hobiger,
  • M. Hallo,
  • C. Schmelzbach,
  • S. C. Stähler,
  • D. Fäh,
  • D. Giardini,
  • M. Golombek,
  • J. Clinton,
  • N. Dahmen,
  • G. Zenhäusern,
  • B. Knapmeyer-Endrun,
  • S. Carrasco,
  • C. Charalambous,
  • K. Hurst,
  • S. Kedar,
  • W. B. Banerdt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-26957-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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We invert Rayleigh wave ellipticity curves extracted from ambient seismic vibrations at the InSight landing site to resolve, for the first time on Mars, the shallow subsurface to around 200 m depth. While our seismic velocity model is largely consistent with the expected stacks of lava flows, we find a seismic low velocity zone at about 30 to 75 m depth that we interpret as a sedimentary layer sandwiched between layers of basalt flows.