The Commercial Appeal

New NASA lander captures sounds of Martian wind

- Marcia Dunn ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – NASA’s new Mars lander has captured the sounds of the “really unworldly” Martian wind.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory released audio clips of the alien wind Friday. The low-frequency rumblings were collected by the InSight lander during its first week of operations at Mars.

The wind is estimated to be blowing 10 mph to 15 mph. These are the first sounds from Mars that are detectable by human ears, according to the researcher­s.

“Reminds me of sitting outside on a windy summer afternoon. … In some sense, this is what it would sound like if you were sitting on the InSight lander on Mars,” Cornell University’s Don Banfield told reporters.

Scientists involved in the project agree the sound has an otherworld­ly quality to it.

Thomas Pike of Imperial College London said the rumbling is “rather different to anything that we’ve experience­d on Earth, and I think it just gives us another way of thinking about how far away we are getting these signals.”

The noise is of the wind blowing against InSight’s solar panels and the resulting vibration of the entire spacecraft. The sounds were recorded by an air pressure sensor inside the lander that’s part of a weather station, as well as the seismomete­r on the deck of the spacecraft.

The low frequencie­s are a result of Mars’ thin air density and even more so the seismomete­r itself – it’s meant to detect undergroun­d seismic waves, well below the threshold of human hearing. The seismomete­r will be moved to the Martian surface in the coming weeks; until then, the team plans to record more wind noise.

The 1976 Viking landers on Mars picked up spacecraft shaking caused by wind, but it would be a stretch to consider it sound, said InSight’s lead scientist, Bruce Banerdt, of JPL in Pasadena, California. InSight landed on Mars on Nov. 26. “We’re all still on a high from the landing last week … and here we are less than two weeks after landing, and we’ve already got some amazing new science,” said NASA’s Lori Glaze, acting director of planetary science. “It’s cool, it’s fun.”

The Associated Press Health & Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

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