NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover captured these clouds just after sunset on March 19, 2021, the 3,063rd Martian day, or sol, of the rover’s mission. The image is made up of 21 individual images stitched together and color corrected so that the scene appears as it would to the human eye.
Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
The science team is studying the clouds, which arrived earlier and formed
higher than expected, to learn more about the Red Planet.
Cloudy days are rare in the thin, dry atmosphere of Mars. Clouds are
typically found at the planet’s equator in the coldest time of year, when Mars
is the farthest from the Sun in its oval-shaped orbit. But one full Martian
year ago – two Earth years – scientists noticed clouds forming over NASA’s
Curiosity rover earlier than expected.
This year, they were ready to start documenting these “early” clouds from
the moment they first appeared in late January. What resulted are images of
wispy puffs filled with ice crystals that scattered light from the setting Sun,
some of them shimmering with color. More than just spectacular displays, such
images help scientists understand how clouds form on Mars and why these recent
ones are different.
This GIF shows clouds
drifting over Mount Sharp on Mars, as viewed by NASA’s Curiosity rover on March
19, 2021, the 3,063rd Martian day, or sol, of the mission. Each frame of the
scene was stitched together from six individual images.
Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
In fact, Curiosity’s team has already made one new discovery: The
early-arrival clouds are actually at higher altitudes than is typical. Most
Martian clouds hover no more than about 37 miles (60 kilometers) in the sky and
are composed of water ice. But the clouds Curiosity has imaged are at a higher
altitude, where it’s very cold, indicating that they are likely made of frozen
carbon dioxide, or dry ice. Scientists look for subtle clues to establish a
cloud’s altitude, and it will take more analysis to say for sure which of
Curiosity’s recent images show water-ice clouds and which show dry-ice ones.
Using the navigation
cameras on its mast, NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took these images of clouds
just after sunset on March 31, 2021, the 3,075th sol, or Martian day, of the
mission.
Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
The fine, rippling structures of these clouds are easier to see with images
from Curiosity’s black-and-white navigation cameras. But it’s the color images
from the rover’s Mast Camera, or Mastcam, that really shine – literally. Viewed
just after sunset, their ice crystals catch the fading light, causing them to
appear to glow against the darkening sky. These twilight clouds, also known as
“noctilucent” (Latin for “night shining”) clouds, grow brighter as they fill
with crystals, then darken after the Sun’s position in the sky drops below
their altitude. This is just one useful clue scientists use to determine how
high they are.
Using the navigation
cameras on its mast, NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover took these images of clouds
just after sunset on March 28, 2021, the 3,072nd sol, or Martian day, of the
mission.
Credits:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Even more stunning are iridescent, or “mother of pearl” clouds. “If you see
a cloud with a shimmery pastel set of colors in it, that’s because the cloud
particles are all nearly identical in size,” said Mark Lemmon, an atmospheric
scientist with the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colorado. “That’s
usually happening just after the clouds have formed and have all grown at the
same rate.”
These clouds are among the more colorful
things on the Red Planet, he added. If you were skygazing next to Curiosity,
you could see the colors with the naked eye, although they’d be faint.
“I always marvel at the colors that show up: reds and
greens and blues and purples,” Lemmon said. “It’s really cool to see something
shining with lots of color on Mars.”
For more about Curiosity, visit: https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/
For more about NASA’s Mars program, visit: https://mars.nasa.gov
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-s-curiosity-rover-captures-shining-clouds-on-mars
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