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Martian dust storm impact on atmospheric H₂O and D/H observed by ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter

Authors :
Vandaele, Ann Carine
Korablev, Oleg
Daerden, Frank
Aoki, Shohei
Thomas, Ian R.
Altieri, Francesca
López-Valverde, Miguel
Villanueva, Geronimo
Liuzzi, Giuliano
Smith, Michael D.
Erwin, Justin T.
Trompet, Loïc
Fedorova, Anna A.
Montmessin, Franck
Trokhimovskiy, Alexander
Belyaev, Denis A.
Ignatiev, Nikolay I.
Luginin, Mikhail
Olsen, Kevin S.
Baggio, Lucio
Alday, Juan
Bertaux, Jean-Loup
Betsis, Daria
Bolsée, David
Clancy, R. Todd
Cloutis, Edward
Depiesse, Cédric
Funke, Bernd
Garcia-Comas, Maia
Gérard, Jean-Claude
Giuranna, Marco
Gonzalez-Galindo, Francisco
Grigoriev, Alexey V.
Ivanov, Yuriy S.
Kaminski, Jacek
Karatekin, Ozgur
Lefèvre, Franck
Lewis, Stephen
López-Puertas, Manuel
Mahieux, Arnaud
Maslov, Igor
Mason, Jon
Mumma, Michael J.
Neary, Lori
Neefs, Eddy
Patrakeev, Andrey
Patsaev, Dmitry
Ristic, Bojan
Robert, Séverine
Schmidt, Frédéric
Shakun, Alexey
Teanby, Nicholas A.
Viscardy, Sébastien
Willame, Yannick
Whiteway, James
Wilquet, Valérie
Wolff, Michael J.
Bellucci, Giancarlo
Patel, Manish R.
López-Moreno, Jose-Juan
Forget, François
Wilson, Colin F.
Svedhem, Håkan
Vago, Jorge L.
Rodionov, Daniel
Publisher :
Macmillan Journals Ltd.

Abstract

Global dust storms on Mars are rare but can affect the Martian atmosphere for several months. They can cause changes in atmospheric dynamics and inflation of the atmosphere, primarily owing to solar heating of the dust. In turn, changes in atmospheric dynamics can affect the distribution of atmospheric water vapour, with potential implications for the atmospheric photochemistry and climate on Mars. Recent observations of the water vapour abundance in the Martian atmosphere during dust storm conditions revealed a high-altitude increase in atmospheric water vapour that was more pronounced at high northern latitudes, as well as a decrease in the water column at low latitudes. Here we present concurrent, high-resolution measurements of dust, water and semiheavy water (HDO) at the onset of a global dust storm, obtained by the NOMAD and ACS instruments onboard the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter. We report the vertical distribution of the HDO/H₂O ratio (D/H) from the planetary boundary layer up to an altitude of 80 kilometres. Our findings suggest that before the onset of the dust storm, HDO abundances were reduced to levels below detectability at altitudes above 40 kilometres. This decrease in HDO coincided with the presence of water-ice clouds. During the storm, an increase in the abundance of H₂O and HDO was observed at altitudes between 40 and 80 kilometres. We propose that these increased abundances may be the result of warmer temperatures during the dust storm causing stronger atmospheric circulation and preventing ice cloud formation, which may confine water vapour to lower altitudes through gravitational fall and subsequent sublimation of ice crystals. The observed changes in H₂O and HDO abundance occurred within a few days during the development of the dust storm, suggesting a fast impact of dust storms on the Martian atmosphere.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dd1b4dec660261ed26541cf50df1c0ba