萌妹社区


Dust storms swirl at the north pole of Mars

Dust storms swirl at the north pole of Mars
This series of images captured by the Visual Monitoring Camera onboard ESA鈥檚 Mars Express covers about 70 minutes of motion as a dust storm moves along the north polar ice cap of Mars on 29 May 2019. The storm moved with an approximate speed of 20 m/s. The polar ice cap covers much of the left of the image while the storm is seen on the right. Mars Express was moving along its orbit but the images have been re-projected as if the observer was stationary, to make the motion of the storm clearer. The illumination angle of the Sun changes between image frames, highlighting the structures in the dust clouds. The black margins arise from the variable distance of Mars Express to the planet along its orbit: closer to the planet it cannot always image the same parts of the surface in consecutive images. Credit: ESA/GCP/UPV/EHU Bilbao

ESA's Mars Express has been keeping an eye on local and regional dust storms brewing at the north pole of the Red Planet over the last month, watching as they disperse towards the equator.

Local and regional storms lasting for a few days or weeks and confined to a small area are common place on Mars, but at their most severe can engulf the entire planet, as experienced last year in a global that circled the planet for many months.

It is currently spring in the northern hemisphere of Mars, and water-ice clouds and small -lifting events are frequently observed along the edge of the seasonally retreating ice cap.

Many of the spacecraft at Mars return daily weather reports from orbit or from the surface, providing global and local impressions of the changing atmospheric conditions. ESA's Mars Express observed at least eight different storms at the edge of the ice cap between 22 May and 10 June, which formed and dissipated very quickly, between one and three days.

The two cameras onboard the spacecraft, the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) and the Visual Monitoring Camera (VMC), have been monitoring the storms over the last weeks. The image at the top of this page, taken by HRSC on 26 May, captures a spiral-shaped dust storm, its brown color contrasting against the white ice of the north polar ice cap below.

Dust storms swirl at the north pole of Mars
Dust storm season on Mars. Credit: ESA/DLR/FU Berlin, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

Meanwhile the animated sequence (above) was compiled from images of a different storm captured by the VMC over a period of 70 minutes on 29 May. This particular storm started on 28 May and continued to around 1 June, moving towards the equator during that time.

The montage of images (below) shows three different storms developing on 22 May, on 26 May, and between 6 and 10 June. In the latter case, the cameras watched the storm evolve for several days as it moved in an equatorward direction.

At the same time, wispy patches of light-colored clouds can be seen at the outer margin of the polar cap and also several thousand kilometers away, close to the volcanoes Elysium Mons and Olympus Mons.

Dust storms swirl at the north pole of Mars
A dust storm underway at the edge of the north polar ice cap of Mars. The image was taken by the Mars Express Visual Monitoring Camera on 29 May 2019. Credit: ESA/GCP/UPV/EHU Bilbao

Together with the MARCI onboard NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Mars Express observed that when the reached the large volcanoes, orographic clouds鈥攚ater ice clouds driven by the influence of the volcano's leeward slope on the air flow鈥攖hat had previously been developing started to evaporate as a result of the air mass being heated by the influx of dust.

These regional dust storms only last a few days; the elevated dust is transported and spread out by global circulation into a thin haze in the lower atmosphere, around 20-40 km altitude. Some traces of dust and remained in the volcanic province into mid-June.

Provided by European Space Agency

Citation: Dust storms swirl at the north pole of Mars (2019, July 8) retrieved 22 May 2025 from /news/2019-07-storms-swirl-north-pole-mars.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Dust storms on Mars

91 shares

Feedback to editors