Researchers conducted lab-based experiments on carbon dioxide (CO2) sublimation - the process by which a substance changes from a solid to a gas without an intermediate liquid phase.
The findings suggest the same process is responsible for altering the appearance of sand dunes on Mars.
"We have all heard the exciting news snippets about the evidence for water on Mars," said Lauren Mc Keown, from Trinity College Dublin in the UK.
"Mars' atmosphere is composed of over 95 per cent CO2, yet we know little about how it interacts with the surface of the planet," she said.
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"Mars has seasons, just like Earth, which means that in winter, a lot of the CO2 in the atmosphere changes state from a gas to a solid and is deposited onto the surface in that form," she added.
Several years ago, researchers discovered unique markings on the surface of Martian sand dunes called Sand Furrows.
These elongated shallow, networked features that formed and disappeared seasonally on Martian dunes.
"What was unusual about them was that they appeared to trend both up and down the dune slopes, which ruled out liquid water as the cause," said Mary Bourke, of Durham University in the UK.
The researchers designed and built a low humidity chamber and placed CO2 blocks on the granular surface. The experiments revealed that sublimating CO2 can form a range of furrow morphologies that are similar to those observed on Mars.
"The difference in temperature between the sandy surface and the CO2 block will generate a vapour layer beneath the block, allowing it to levitate and maneuver downslope, in a similar manner to how pucks glide on an ice-hockey table, carving a channel in its wake," said Mc Keown.
"At the terminus, the block will sublimate and erode a pit. It will then disappear without a trace other than the roughly circular depression beneath it," she said.
In some cases, blocks sublimated so rapidly that they burrowed beneath the subsurface and were swallowed up by the sand in under 60 seconds.
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