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TEMPE, Ariz. -- Scientists at Arizona State University's Mars Space
Flight Center are using the Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) on
NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter to monitor a large dust storm on the Red
Planet. The instrument, a multi-wavelength camera sensitive to five
visible wavelengths and 10 infrared ones, is providing Mars scientists and
spacecraft controllers with global maps that track how much atmospheric
dust is obscuring the planet.
The dust storm, which erupted during the last week of June 2007, is
affecting operations for all five spacecraft operating at Mars. The fleet
includes two NASA rovers on the ground (Spirit and Opportunity), plus
three orbiters, two of which belong to NASA (Mars Odyssey and Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter) and one to the European Space Agency (Mars
Express).
Beginning in Mars' heavily cratered southern highlands, the dust storm
took roughly a week to grow large enough to encircle the planet. Dust has
now drifted into the northern hemisphere as well.
"This is the favorable time of the Martian year for dust storms," says
Joshua Bandfield, research associate at the Mars Space Flight Facility.
The facility is part of the School of Earth and Space Exploration in ASU's
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"It's summer in the southern hemisphere," he says, "That's when Mars
lies closest to the sun and solar heating is greatest."
Bandfield adds, "We can watch weather fronts spreading and kicking up
dust in a big way." He explains that as winds sweep dust into the
atmosphere, the atmosphere becomes warmer. This adds to the storm's power,
helping it to pick up more dust. But the process has a built-in
limitation, he says. "When the dust becomes thick enough, it reflects more
sunlight from the atmosphere, allowing the air near the surface to cool."
As seen from orbit, the dust storm has the effect of veiling surface
features – or even concealing them completely, which hasn't happened yet
in this event. "This storm isn't as big or severe as the one in 2001,"
Bandfield says. "THEMIS and other orbiters can still see the surface,
despite the continuing dust activity."
From the ground, the dust in the air has cut the amount of sunlight
reaching the rovers' solar panels and reducing their electrical power. "If
you were standing there, you'd see the sky looking tawny with haze,"
explains Bandfield. "The sun would appear as a sharp-edged disk, but the
light level would be noticeably lower than what you would see under a
totally clear sky."
Luckily, say scientists, summer is a time when the rovers can best
survive under reduced power. If the storm had struck during local winter,
the rovers might not get enough power during the day to stay alive through
the cold Martian night.
How long will this storm last" No one knows for sure, but Bandfield
notes its effects won't disappear as quickly as the storm erupted. "Mars,"
he says, "will remain dusty for at least a couple months more."
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