24 research outputs found

    Field Measurements of Terrestrial and Martian Dust Devils

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    Surface-based measurements of terrestrial and martian dust devils/convective vortices provided from mobile and stationary platforms are discussed. Imaging of terrestrial dust devils has quantified their rotational and vertical wind speeds, translation speeds, dimensions, dust load, and frequency of occurrence. Imaging of martian dust devils has provided translation speeds and constraints on dimensions, but only limited constraints on vertical motion within a vortex. The longer mission durations on Mars afforded by long operating robotic landers and rovers have provided statistical quantification of vortex occurrence (time-of-sol, and recently seasonal) that has until recently not been a primary outcome of more temporally limited terrestrial dust devil measurement campaigns. Terrestrial measurement campaigns have included a more extensive range of measured vortex parameters (pressure, wind, morphology, etc.) than have martian opportunities, with electric field and direct measure of dust abundance not yet obtained on Mars. No martian robotic mission has yet provided contemporaneous high frequency wind and pressure measurements. Comparison of measured terrestrial and martian dust devil characteristics suggests that martian dust devils are larger and possess faster maximum rotational wind speeds, that the absolute magnitude of the pressure deficit within a terrestrial dust devil is an order of magnitude greater than a martian dust devil, and that the time-of-day variation in vortex frequency is similar. Recent terrestrial investigations have demonstrated the presence of diagnostic dust devil signals within seismic and infrasound measurements; an upcoming Mars robotic mission will obtain similar measurement types

    Earth as a Tool for Astrobiology—A European Perspective

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    Experimental progress in positronium laser physics

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    Effects of rolling on wind-induced detachment thresholds of volcanic glass on Mars

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    Dunes in the northern lowlands on planet Mars are composed of volcanic sands with high contents of volcanic glass and these deposits are mobilised and transported by winds in the present-day surface environment. In this experimental study we measured fluid thresholds for detachment of Mars-analogue volcanic glass particles using a low-fluid density wind tunnel under wind shear stresses in the range of 0.1-0.6 N m−2. Measured thresholds for larger particle diameters (>150 µm) were best-explained using a semi-empirical model of detachment which incorporates the effects of drag-induced rolling. Fitting of this semi-empirical model to obtained experimental data, combined with a residual analysis of the model fit with quantified particle properties made it possible to assess the sensitivity and validity of the model for predicting this type of particle detachment. This new model was used to predict the threshold shear stress for detachment of particles on Mars and indicated that larger particle diameters can detach by drag-induced rolling when subjected to present-day surface wind shears. A large morphological and granulometric variety of particles is therefore susceptible to this form of detachment, which provides a possible mechanism for the initial mobilisation of particles at lower wind speeds than required for detachment by saltation. Recent sand mobility may therefore have benefited from rolling as a contributing or as a saltation triggering process

    Simulating Martian regolith in the laboratory

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    Regolith and dust cover the surfaces of the Solar Systems solid bodies, and thus constitute the visible surface of these objects. The topmost layers also interact with space or the atmosphere in the case of Mars, Venus and Titan. Surface probes have been proposed, studied and flown to some of these worlds. Landers and some of the mechanisms they carry, e.g. sampling devices, drills and subsurface probes ("moles") will interact with the porous surface layer. The absence of true extraterrestrial test materials in ample quantities restricts experiments to the use of soil or regolith analogue materials. Several standardized soil simulants have been developed and produced and are commonly used for a variety of laboratory experiments. In this paper we intend to give an overview of some of the most important soil simulants, and describe experiments (penetrometry, thermal conductivity, aeolian transport, goniometry, spectroscopy and exobiology) made in various European laboratory facilities
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