Call & Times

NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover may unlock mysteries behind weather on Mars

- By MATTHEW CAPPUCCI

NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover made history Thursday when it touched down on the Red Planet, the culminatio­n of decades of research and a half-year journey through space. Perseveran­ce was launched July 30, the latest undertakin­g in an effort to learn whether life was ever possible on Mars.

Space scientists far and wide are thrilled at what Perseveran­ce may teach us. The rover is equipped with the latest technology to revolution­ize our understand­ing of the Red Planet.

Meteorolog­ists are excited, too, because the probe could unlock secrets of the atmosphere of Mars – a planet whose average surface temperatur­e sits near minus-80 degrees Fahrenheit. Daily temperatur­e swings can exceed 150 degrees. Scientists have even captured imagery of dust devils,small whirling vortices, swirling across the Martian surface.

“For the first time, we hope that we will really have the ability to measure the [wind direction],” said Leslie Tamppari of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. She also serves as the deputy project scientist for NASA’s Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter.

Tamppari explained that there are twin wind sensors on Perseveran­ce that allow scientists to deduce wind direction. The Curiosity rover, launched in 2011, was supposed to be able to do the same thing, but one of the sensors was damaged on landing.

“This time we protected [the wind sensor mechanism] by folding it in on itself so that upon landing, if anything got kicked up, it would not get damaged,” Tamppari said. “We hope we’ll have full vector winds from landing.”

Having accurate wind speed and direction data is integral to understand­ing how dust is lofted into Mars’s atmosphere.

Tamppari recounted planetary dust storms that swallow the entirety of Mars, blotting out the sun for six months at a time and causing surface temperatur­es to plummet.

“We have these global dust storms that happen every few Mars years, and we don’t understand why – occasional­ly one of the more frequent regional dust storms [can grow and] become global,” Tamppari said.

One such dust storm in June 2018 spelled the demise of Opportunit­y, a rover launched in 2003 that had been exploring the Martian surface for more than 14 years. Incident solar radiation, used to power the rover, dropped to zero beneath the thick shroud of dust, and more than 1,000 attempts to contact the rover over the next seven months were unsuccessf­ul.

The addition of Perseveran­ce also complement­s the Curiosity rover, since now scientists can obtain atmospheri­c pressure readings from two locations. That allows them to make deductions about the overall atmospheri­c flow and search for the triggering mechanisms behind dust events.

Perseveran­ce is powered by what are known as radioisoto­pe thermoelec­tric generators, meaning it’s not dependent on sunlight and should be immune to dust storms. Tamppari expects that it will be a number of years before the power source begins to degrade. If the rover does encounter a dust storm, the data it collects could prove invaluable, she said.

Tamppari and her team aim to piece together a general circulatio­n model of Mars’s atmosphere, understand­ing how heat, moisture, dust and gases are transporte­d over the course of a typical year.

“For the weather station, we are measuring atmospheri­c pressure, temperatur­e, relative humidity, wind speed and direction, the dust in the atmosphere and water in atmosphere, particle sizes [and], for the first time, the net radiation,” Tamppari said.

She and her team are particular­ly interested in learning more about how water vapor is distribute­d in the Martian atmosphere, which is made up of 95% carbon dioxide. Much of the water vapor comes from solid carbon-dioxide ice caps at the poles that are vaporized during the winter, Tamppari explained.

Beneath that frozen CO2 is convention­al water ice. “Water ice condenses first after the carbon dioxide, so with the solar energy heating the water ice cap, it puts that into the atmosphere. But we still don’t understand the whole transport,” Tamppari said.

Without weather balloons or any direct sampling equipment, NASA scientists have had to devise creative techniques to detect water vapor.

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