Abstract

AbstractHydrogen escape to space has shaped Mars' atmospheric evolution, driving significant water loss. An unknown fraction of atmospheric H lost acquires its escape energy from photochemical processes, with multiple observational studies suggesting much higher densities of such “hot” H than models predict. Here, we show that a previously unconsidered mechanism, HCO+ dissociative recombination, produces more escaping hot H than any previously studied process, potentially accounting for more than 50% of escape during solar minimum aphelion conditions and ∼5% of the expected long‐term average loss. This hot H is predicted to impact observed brightness profiles negligibly, posing a significant challenge to the interpretation of spacecraft remote sensing observations. This mechanism's efficiency is largely due to the high (63%–83%) albedo of the planet to H at 1–10 eV energies, indicating the likely importance of dozens of similar photochemical mechanisms for the desiccation of Mars, Venus and planets throughout the universe.

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