NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover captured these drifting
noctilucent, or twilight, clouds in a 16-minute recording on Jan. 17. (This
looping clip has been speeded up about 480 times.) The white plumes falling out
of the clouds are carbon dioxide ice that would evaporate closer to the Martian
surface.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS/SSI
While the Martian clouds may look like the kind seen in Earth’s skies, they
include frozen carbon dioxide, or dry ice.
Red-and-green-tinted clouds drift
through the Martian sky in a new set of images captured by NASA’s Curiosity
rover using its Mastcam — its main set of “eyes.” Taken over 16 minutes on Jan.
17 (the 4,426th Martian day, or sol, of Curiosity’s mission), the images show
the latest observations of what are called noctilucent (Latin for “night
shining”), or twilight clouds, tinged with color by scattering light from the
setting Sun.
Sometimes these clouds even create
a rainbow
of colors, producing
iridescent, or “mother-of-pearl” clouds. Too faint to be seen in daylight,
they’re only visible when the clouds are especially high and evening has
fallen.
Martian clouds are made of either
water ice or, at higher altitudes and lower temperatures, carbon dioxide ice.
(Mars’ atmosphere is more than 95% carbon dioxide.) The latter are the only
kind of clouds observed at Mars producing iridescence, and they can be seen
near the top of the new images at an altitude of around 37 to 50 miles (60 to
80 kilometers). They’re also visible as white plumes falling through the
atmosphere, traveling as low as 31 miles (50 kilometers) above the surface
before evaporating because of rising temperatures. Appearing briefly at the
bottom of the images are water-ice clouds traveling in the opposite direction
roughly 31 miles (50 kilometers) above the rover.
Dawn of
Twilight Clouds
Twilight clouds were first seen on
Mars by NASA’s
Pathfinder mission in 1997; Curiosity didn’t spot them until 2019, when it acquired
its first-ever images of iridescence in the clouds. This is the fourth Mars year the rover
has observed the phenomenon, which occurs during early fall in the southern
hemisphere.
Mark Lemmon, an atmospheric
scientist with the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colorado, led a paper summarizing Curiosity’s first two seasons of twilight cloud
observations, which published late last year in Geophysical Research Letters.
“I’ll always remember the first time I saw those iridescent clouds and was sure
at first it was some color artifact,” he said. “Now it’s become so predictable
that we can plan our shots in advance; the clouds show up at exactly the same
time of year.”
Each sighting is an opportunity to
learn more about the particle size and growth rate in Martian clouds. That, in
turn, provides more information about the planet’s atmosphere.
Cloud Mystery
One big mystery is why twilight
clouds made of carbon dioxide ice haven’t been spotted in other locations on
Mars. Curiosity, which landed in 2012, is on Mount Sharp in Gale Crater, just
south of the Martian equator. Pathfinder landed in Ares Vallis, north of the
equator. NASA’s Perseverance rover, located in the northern hemisphere’s Jezero Crater, hasn’t
seen any carbon dioxide ice twilight clouds since its 2021 landing. Lemmon and
others suspect that certain regions of Mars may be predisposed to forming them.
A possible source of the clouds
could be gravity waves, he said, which can cool the atmosphere: “Carbon dioxide
was not expected to be condensing into ice here, so something is cooling it to
the point that it could happen. But Martian gravity waves are not fully
understood and we’re not entirely sure what is causing twilight clouds to form
in one place but not another.”
Mastcam’s
Partial View
The new twilight clouds appear
framed in a partially open circle. That’s because they were taken using one of
Mastcam’s two color cameras: the left 34 mm focal length Mastcam, which has
a filter wheel that is stuck between positions. Curiosity’s team at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California remains able to use both this
camera and the higher-resolution right 100 mm focal length camera for color
imaging.
The rover recently wrapped an
investigation of a place called Gediz Vallis channel and is on its way to a new
location that includes boxwork — fractures formed by groundwater that look like giant
spiderwebs when viewed from space.
More recently, Curiosity visited an impact crater nicknamed “Rustic Canyon,” capturing it in images and studying the composition of rocks around it. The crater, 67 feet (20 meters) in diameter, is shallow and has lost much of its rim to erosion, indicating that it likely formed many millions of years ago. One reason Curiosity’s science team studies craters is because the cratering process can unearth long-buried materials that may have better preserved organic molecules than rocks exposed to radiation at the surface. These molecules provide a window into the ancient Martian environment and how it could have supported microbial life billions of years ago, if any ever formed on the Red Planet.
By: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Source: NASA’s Curiosity Rover Captures Colorful Clouds Drifting Over Mars - NASA
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