Litcius/Paper detail

Dust tides and rapid meridional motions in the Martian atmosphere during major dust storms

Zhaopeng Wu, Tao Li, Xi Zhang, Jing Li, Jun Cui

2020Nature Communications57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The atmosphere of Mars is strongly affected by the spatial and temporal variability of airborne dust. However, global dust variability within a sol (Martian day) is still poorly understood. Although short-term dynamic processes are crucial, detailed comparisons of simulated diurnal variations are limited by relatively sparse observations. Here, we report the discovery of ubiquitous, strong diurnal tides of dust in the Southern Hemisphere of Mars. Driven by the westward-propagating migrating diurnal thermal tide, zonally distributed dust fronts slosh back and forth in a wide latitudinal range of up to 40° within one sol during major dust storms. Dust tides-tidal transport of dust in this way-rapidly transport heat and constituents meridionally, allowing moist air near the summer pole to be rapidly transported to lower latitudes during the night, where it then can be lifted by daytime deep convection and contribute to hydrogen escape from Mars during global dust storms.

Topics & Concepts

MartianDust stormAtmospheric sciencesAtmosphere of MarsMars Exploration ProgramEnvironmental scienceStormAtmosphere (unit)DaytimeZonal and meridionalClimatologyAstrobiologyGeologyMeteorologyOceanographyGeographyPhysicsPlanetary Science and ExplorationAstro and Planetary ScienceGeology and Paleoclimatology Research