Difference between revisions of "Sublimation"

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Sublimation occurs when ice is heated. A terrestrial example of sublimation is if "dry ice" (solid [[carbon dioxide|CO<sub>2</sub>]]) is exposed to air at one atmosphere. The ice will turn into a gas and appear to steam without passing through a liquid phase. The opposite to sublimation is ''deposition'', where water vapour is cooled and deposited as ice. An example of deposition is terrestrial frost, where water vapour (during winter) becomes very cold, bypassing the liquid (rain) phase.  
 
Sublimation occurs when ice is heated. A terrestrial example of sublimation is if "dry ice" (solid [[carbon dioxide|CO<sub>2</sub>]]) is exposed to air at one atmosphere. The ice will turn into a gas and appear to steam without passing through a liquid phase. The opposite to sublimation is ''deposition'', where water vapour is cooled and deposited as ice. An example of deposition is terrestrial frost, where water vapour (during winter) becomes very cold, bypassing the liquid (rain) phase.  
 
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During the Martian winter CO<sub>2</sub> frost is deposited at the winter pole.  During the Martian summer CO<sub>2</sub> ice sublimes from the summer pole.
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[[category:climate]]
 
[[category:climate]]
 
[[category:physics]]
 
[[category:physics]]

Revision as of 16:08, 23 August 2013

The phase diagram for water, clearly displaying water's triple point. The transition between solid to gas is known as sublimation.

Sublimation is the phase transition between solid and gas, without an itermediate liquid phase. As the pressure and temperature of Mars is very low, water on the surface can only exist as ice or water vapour. In the phase diagram for water on Mars, temperatures and atmospheric pressure are below the triple point.

Sublimation occurs when ice is heated. A terrestrial example of sublimation is if "dry ice" (solid CO2) is exposed to air at one atmosphere. The ice will turn into a gas and appear to steam without passing through a liquid phase. The opposite to sublimation is deposition, where water vapour is cooled and deposited as ice. An example of deposition is terrestrial frost, where water vapour (during winter) becomes very cold, bypassing the liquid (rain) phase.

During the Martian winter CO2 frost is deposited at the winter pole. During the Martian summer CO2 ice sublimes from the summer pole.