Marin Independent Journal

Mars rover captures 1st sound of dust devil on red planet

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. What's a dust devil sound like on Mars? A NASA rover by chance had its microphone on when a whirling tower of red dust passed directly overhead, recording the racket.

It's about 10 seconds of not only rumbling gusts of up to 25 mph (40 kph), but the pinging of hundreds of dust particles against the rover Perseveran­ce. Scientists released the first-ofits-kind audio Tuesday.

It sounds strikingly similar to dust devils on Earth, although quieter since Mars' thin atmosphere makes for more muted sounds and less forceful wind, according to the researcher­s.

The dust devil came and went over Perseveran­ce quickly last year, thus the short length of the audio, said the University of Toulouse's Naomi Murdoch, lead author of the study appearing in Nature Communicat­ions. At the same time, the navigation camera on the parked rover captured images, while its weathermon­itoring instrument collected data.

“It was fully caught redhanded by Persy,” said coauthor German Martinez of the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston.

Photograph­ed for decades at Mars but never heard until now, dust devils are common at the red planet. This one was in the average range: at least 400 feet (118 meters) tall and 80 feet (25 meters) across, traveling at 16 feet (5 meters) per second.

The microphone picked up 308 dust pings as the dust devil whipped by, said Murdoch, who helped build it.

Given that the rover's SuperCam microphone is turned on for less than three minutes every few days, Murdoch said it was “definitely luck” that the dust devil appeared when it did on Sept. 27, 2021. She estimates there was just a 1-in-200 chance of capturing dust-devil audio.

Of the 84 minutes collected in its first year, there's “only one dust devil recording,” she wrote in an email from France.

This same microphone on Perseveran­ce's mast provided the first sounds from Mars — namely the Martian wind — soon after the rover landed in February 2021. It followed up with audio of the rover driving around and its companion helicopter, little Ingenuity, flying nearby, as well as the crackle of the rover's rockzappin­g lasers, the main reason for the microphone.

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