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The current weather and climate of Mars: 12 years of atmospheric monitoring by the Planetary Fourier Spectrometer on Mars Express.

Authors :
Giuranna, Marco
Wolkenberg, Paulina
Grassi, Davide
Aronica, Alessandro
Aoki, Shohei
Scaccabarozzi, Diego
Saggin, Bortolino
Formisano, V.
Source :
ICARUS. Jan2021, Vol. 353, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

We used thermal-infrared spectra returned by the Mars Express Planetary Fourier Spectrometer (PFS/MEx) to retrieve atmospheric temperature profiles, surface temperatures, and column-integrated optical depths of dust and water ice. More than 2,500,000 spectra were processed to build this new atmospheric dataset, covering the full range of season, latitude, longitude, and local time. The data presented here span more than six Martian Years (from MY 26, Ls = 331°, 10 January 2004 to MY 33, Ls = 78°, 6 December 2015). We present an overview of the seasonal and latitudinal dependence of the above atmospheric quantities for the relevant period, as well as an assessment of the interannual variability in the current Martian climate. The general effect of suspended dust on atmospheric temperatures observed during the global dust storm of MY 28 is also presented. Atmospheric temperatures and aerosol opacity were successfully retrieved over cold surface areas and in the polar regions, including the polar nights. Rather than the aphelion cloud belt, the most prominent feature one can observe in the climatology of the Martian water ice clouds is the seasonal extent, pattern and thickness of the North polar hoods (NPH), where most of the thickest clouds are observed. The NPH also shows peculiar features, observed in detail here for the first time, with characteristic spatial and seasonal patterns that repeat very similarly every Martian year. By exploiting PFS/MEx capability to perform observations at different local times (LT), this dataset allowed the characterization of how dust and ice cloud optical depths vary throughout the day on Mars. We present observations of the dust daily cycle during non-dusty seasons; the daily variation of water ice opacity in the aphelion cloud belt; and the diurnal variation of the North and South polar hoods. With unprecedented spatial and temporal coverage and details revealed, this dataset offers new challenges to the Martian global circulation models and, at the same time, a new reference for the MYs complementary to those observed by previous orbiters. • New atmospheric dataset of temperature profiles, surface temperatures, dust and water ice opacity on Mars from PFS-MEx • Successful retrieval over cold surface areas and in the polar regions, including the polar nights • Continuous monitoring of the Martian atmosphere for over 7 full Martian Years (from MY 26, Ls = 331°, to MY 33, Ls = 78°) • Peculiar features of the North Polar Hoods observed in detail for the first time • Complete daily cycle of suspended dust and water ice on Mars [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00191035
Volume :
353
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
ICARUS
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146587288
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2019.113406