“Dust Devil”… “NASA” monitors a weather phenomenon on Mars for the first time

In good news at the level of climate study MarsThe “Perseverance” rover was able to record the sound of the “dust devil” phenomenon, in a very important precedent that will help to better understand the climate of the Red Planet, according to a study whose results were published on Tuesday, December 13th.

These so-called “convective vortices”, similar to the sand whirlwinds that strike some deserts on Earth, are one of the main atmospheric phenomena on Mars, a dry planet with a very sparse atmosphere.

And this atmospheric phenomenon is formed when there is a strong difference in temperature between the soil and the air, and it often gets in the way of robotic exploration missions sent by humans, and the Jezero crater, where the mobile “Perseverance” robot has been working since February 2021, witnesses many of these. phenomena, but this vehicle manufactured by the US Space Agency (NASABefore, she had not been able to directly monitor her own voice.

Fortunately, on September 27, a whirlwind 118 meters high passed over the robot’s head and its “SuperCam” instrument equipped with a microphone recorded the first sound from Mars just following its descent. The data reached Earth a few days later.

“When we realized that we had the images from the camera as well as the data from the weather and acoustic sensors at the site, we felt as if we had hit the jackpot,” said the lead author of the study, whose results were published in the journal Nature Communications, Naomi Murdock.

“We hear the wind associated with the whirlwind, the moment it arrives, then everything disappears because we are in the eye of the vortex, and then the sound returns once more when the microphone passes through the second wall,” added the planetary scientist at the Isai-Supero Institute in Toulouse, France, where the microphone was designed.

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The microphone, in particular, transmitted a precise clicking sound that allows for “particle counting” in order to be able to study the structure and behavior of dust.

“The dust cycle on Mars and in the sky plays a very important role for the climate, just like the water cycle on Earth,” said Naomi Murdock.

The scientific official for the “Supercam” tool, Sylvester Morris, who participated in the study, indicated that the analysis of dust makes it possible to “explore interactions” between the Earth and this very soft atmosphere, which was denser billions of years ago, allowing the presence of liquid water on the surface.

This new data would explain how dust is lifted off the surface of Mars, something scientists do not yet know.

“In some areas, whirlwinds pass by, pull dust and clean up,” said Naomi Murdock Solar Panels robots on their way.

In other regions, the cyclones pass without raising the dust, for an unknown reason, and “it is just moving air,” as is the case at the site where the American “Insight” probe operates, whose solar panels are “covered with dust” because it was unable to benefit from these natural suction devices. .

Elucidating this mechanism may help to develop graphical models of “dust devils” to better predict them. On a larger scale, this might make it possible to predict huge dust storms that might cover the entire planet, similar to the scenario of the 2015 science fiction movie “The Martian”, which the scientist described as “unrealistic”.

“We are in the process of improving our weather model, which is important for the maintenance of our vehicles and for future human exploration missions,” said Sylvester Morris.

As for the contribution of these results to research on traces of extraterrestrial life, the physicist pointed out that “one might think that studying the climate of Mars today has nothing to do with searching for traces of life billions of years ago, but the matter is complementary because the history of Mars witnessed severe climate change that made it It goes from a hot, humid climate (and therefore suitable for the emergence of life) to a completely dry and cold planet.”

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