Paris: NASA’s mobile robot “Perseverance” has revealed the secrets of the amazing sound scene of Mars. From what the rover recorded, it was found that the Red Planet is calm, in which sound travels slowly and at two different speeds.
As soon as the US space agency’s robot landed on the surface of Mars a little more than a year ago, it transmitted the first audio recording by a microphone on Mars in the history of space exploration, at frequencies that the human ear might hear, achieving what previous missions might not.
Behind the vehicle’s roar, a gust of wind might clearly be heard in this recording. Thus, following the exploration vehicles for 50 years have sent thousands of images to Earth, the Red Planet emerged from “acoustic nothingness”, as noted by the National Center for Scientific Research in France, commenting on the publication of a study in this regard in the scientific journal “Nature” on Friday.
This first audio recording showed the presence of previously unknown turbulence systems on Mars, according to the study’s lead author, Sylvester Morris, co-scientific director of the robot’s “SuperCam” instrument, which has a microphone designed by Isae-Supaero in Toulouse, France.
But this recording was not enough to form a clear picture. Since Mars is very quiet most of the time, two “active” sources had to be used to capture the assets provided by the robot before sending it to Mars, said Morris, an astrophysicist from the Institute for Research in Astrophysics and Planets at the University of Toulouse.
His team reported on the flights of the miniature helicopter “Ingenuity” attached to the robot, and from the laser shots directed at the Martian rocks to examine their chemical composition through the sound of its collision with them. The researcher pointed out that these shots provided “a very localized sound source, at a distance of between two and five meters from its target, and the exact timing of its firing was known.”
“Tough Conversation”
It was possible to measure the speed of sound in the field, and it is 240 meters per second, while it is 340 meters per second on planet Earth. Not surprisingly, the speed of sound is slower, given the composition of Mars’ atmosphere (96 percent of it is carbon dioxide, compared to 0.004 percent on Earth) and its very low pressure (170 times that of Earth).
However, the surprise came from the sound of the laser, which reached 250 meters per second. “There I panicked a little!” Sylvester Morris said. I told myself that one of the measurements might not be correct, as there is only one speed of sound on planet Earth, near the surface.”
In fact, there are two speeds of sound on Mars: one for high pitched sounds (laser) and one for low pitched sounds (helicopter). In addition, “sound attenuation is stronger on Mars than on Earth, especially high-pitched sound that fades away very quickly, even at a short distance,” according to the researcher. This would make “a difficult conversation between two people, separated by only five meters,” according to the National Center for Scientific Research.
The researcher even compared it to a concert, and said, “On Earth, the sounds of an orchestra reach you at the same speed, whether low or high. Imagine what would happen on Mars, if you were a little further from the stage…it would take a long time for the sound to arrive.”
Morris believed that the “scientific bet” of equipping a space mission with a microphone was successful. Although this new tool is still in its infancy, continuing to listen to the sounds of Mars through it contributes to a better understanding of its atmosphere, which in the past was similar to the Earth’s and would have provided the appropriate conditions for the existence of forms of living organisms.
Thierry Foucher of the Paris-PSL Observatory, one of the study’s authors, predicted that the analysis of turbulence sounds, such as vertical winds called “convective plumes”, would allow “a refinement of the digital models used for Martian climate and weather forecasts.”
It may be conducted by the same type of instruments audio studies of the atmosphere of the planets Venus and Titan, one of the moons of Saturn.
(AFP)