Martian Dust Devils: 2 Mars Years of MGS MOC Observations
Abstract
Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) wide and narrow angle images have captured more than 1000 active dust devils over 2 Mars years. In the most recent Mars year, we repeatedly imaged (and are continuing to image) several areas to monitor dust devil occurrence. Some Mars dust devils are as small as a few to 10s of meters across, others are 100s of meters across and over 6 km high. Each Martian hemisphere has a "dust devil season" that generally follows the subsolar latitude. An exception is NW Amazonis, which has frequent, large dust devils throughout northern spring and summer (probably every afternoon; observations are acquired 2-3 times a week). The Amazonis and other MOC observations show no evidence that dust devils cause, lead to, or have a systematic relationship with dust storms. However, dust devils sometimes do occur near small, localized storms; and one specific relation occurred during the onset of the global dust events of 2001: slightly elevated levels of atmospheric dust (an optically thin cloud) triggered a very short period of dust devil activity in NW Amazonis in early northern autumn. The redistribution of dust by the 2001 global events may have also affected subsequent spring and summer dust devil activity in Hellas, where considerably fewer dust devils occurred in 2001-2002 than 1999-2000. In SW Syria, frequent, large dust devils occurred after the 2001 global events and persisted through southern summer. While dust devils have no specific relation to dust storms, they might play a role in the seasonal "wave of darkening" at middle and high latitudes by removing or disrupting thin veneers of dust. Dust devils have been observed to create thin, filamentary streaks. Some streaks are darker than their surroundings, while others are lighter. Some dust devils do not create streaks. At mid-latitudes, surfaces darken in spring as 100s of crisscrossing streaks form on widely-varied terrain. Some rare streaks exhibit cycloidal patterns similar to those created on Earth by tornadoes with multiple sub-vortices. The streaks occur at nearly all latitudes and elevations, from north polar dunes to the south polar layered terrain, from the summit of Olympus Mons to the floor of Hellas. During "dust devil season" at a given latitude, tremendous changes in streak patterns occur in periods as short as 1 month. These observations, along with repeated imaging in NW Amazonis and SW Syria, provide some idea of the frequency of dust devils. Uncertain is whether dust devils are responsible for all thin, filamentary streaks: while active vortices have been seen creating the plethora of streaks at southern mid-latitudes, none have been observed on the northern plains, despite observation of similar streak patterns. Perhaps northern plains dust devils occur at a different time of day relative to the MGS 1400 LT orbit, or perhaps dust devils did not form them. We monitored removal of dust from surfaces after the 2001 global dust events in several locations. Of particular interest was western Syrtis Major, which had brightened considerably after the 2001 storms. We observed this area for several months while very little change occurred. Finally, in January 2002, the surface was swept clean of most of its 2001 veneer of dust in a period of about 1 week. Dust devils played no role in this process; instead, regional surface winds were responsible.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2002
- Bibcode:
- 2002AGUFM.P51A0331C
- Keywords:
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- 5445 Meteorology (3346);
- 6225 Mars