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MARSDAILY
Martian Carbon Dioxide Clouds Tied To Atmospheric Gravity Waves
by Staff Writers
Granada, Spain (SPX) Feb 15, 2012

Combining the results of their smaller-scale model with those of a Martian general circulation model, the authors find that they can account for carbon dioxide cloud distribution patterns consistent with observational records.

On 4 March 1997 the Mars Pathfinder lander fell through the thin Martian atmosphere. During its descent, instrumentation aboard the lander recorded the changing atmospheric temperature, pressure, and density.

Within this atmospheric profile, researchers identified anomalous cold air packets within the Martian mesosphere (60-90 kilometers, or 37-56 miles, altitude).

Later orbital measurements confirmed the existence of these cold pockets, adding to the mystery the detection of clouds made from carbon dioxide.

Researchers in 1998 suspected that the cold air pockets, and thus conditions favorable for carbon dioxide condensation, were the product of atmospheric gravity waves in the Martian mesosphere.

That hypothesis remained largely untested until advances in global- and intermediate-scale atmospheric models allowed Spiga et al. to confirm that gravity waves were a potentially viable mechanism to produce the necessary mesospheric conditions.

The authors find that gravity waves, produced in the model when wind rose up and over a mountain, could cause temperature variations in the mesosphere of up to 12 degrees Kelvin (21 degrees Fahrenheit).

They suggest that this amount of cooling, if it happens to coincide with a larger atmospheric temperature shift, could push mesospheric temperatures a few degrees below the -80 degrees Celsius (-112 degrees Fahrenheit) condensation point of carbon dioxide.

Combining the results of their smaller-scale model with those of a Martian general circulation model, the authors find that they can account for carbon dioxide cloud distribution patterns consistent with observational records.

"Gravity waves, cold pockets and CO2 clouds in the Martian mesosphere" - Geophysical Research Letters, doi: 10.1029/2011GL050343, 2012; Authors: A. Spiga and F. Forget: Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique, Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace, Paris, France; F. Gonzalez-Galindo and M.-A. Lopez-Valverde: Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientifica, Granada, Spain.

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Rocks on Mars dug from far underground by crater-blasting impacts are providing glimpses of one possible way Mars' atmosphere has become much less dense than it used to be. At several places where cratering has exposed material from depths of about 5 kilometers (3 miles) or more beneath the surface, observations by a mineral-mapping instrument on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter indicate ... read more


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