Mars’ atmosphere typically supports dust aerosol with an effective radius near 1.5 μm, varying from ~1 μm during low dust times near northern summer solstice to ~2 μm during higher dust times in southern spring and summer. After global dust events, size variations outside this range have not previously been observed. We report on imaging and spectral observations by the Curiosity rover through the 2018 global dust event. These observations show that the dust effective radius was seasonally normal prior to the local onset of increased opacity, increased rapidly above 4 μm with increasing opacity, remained above 3 μm over a period of ~50 Martian solar days, then returned to seasonal values before the opacity did so. This demonstrates lif...
Super-rotation affects—and is affected by—the distribution of dust in the martian atmosphere. We mod...
International audienceA realistic spatio-temporal variability in atmospheric dust loading is essenti...
We report limb measurements of the oxygen dayglow emission at 297.2 nm performed during four Martian...
Mars is a dusty planet. Wind often lifts dust from the surface into the air forming clouds of dust a...
Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover observations of the 2018/Mars year 34 global/planet-encircli...
The amount of dust suspended in the Martian atmosphere is highly variable with location and with tim...
International audienceCoagulation of particles occurs when two particles collide and stick together....
Dust aerosol plays a fundamental role in the behavior and evolution of the Martian atmosphere. The f...
The dust cycle is critically important for Mars' current climate system. Suspended atmospheric dust ...
The properties of Martian aerosols are an integral part of the planetary climatology. Global dust st...
peer reviewedWe report limb measurements of the oxygen dayglow emission at 297.2 nm performed durin...
International audienceThe properties of Martian aerosols are an integral part of the planetary clima...
Numerical experiments were completed examining the variability of key aspects of the Martian dust cy...
This work investigates surface dust lifting by Martian dust devils within a global-scale computer mo...
Abstract NASA's InSight landed in Elysium Planitia (~4.5°N,136°E) at Ls ~ 296° (November 2018), righ...
Super-rotation affects—and is affected by—the distribution of dust in the martian atmosphere. We mod...
International audienceA realistic spatio-temporal variability in atmospheric dust loading is essenti...
We report limb measurements of the oxygen dayglow emission at 297.2 nm performed during four Martian...
Mars is a dusty planet. Wind often lifts dust from the surface into the air forming clouds of dust a...
Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover observations of the 2018/Mars year 34 global/planet-encircli...
The amount of dust suspended in the Martian atmosphere is highly variable with location and with tim...
International audienceCoagulation of particles occurs when two particles collide and stick together....
Dust aerosol plays a fundamental role in the behavior and evolution of the Martian atmosphere. The f...
The dust cycle is critically important for Mars' current climate system. Suspended atmospheric dust ...
The properties of Martian aerosols are an integral part of the planetary climatology. Global dust st...
peer reviewedWe report limb measurements of the oxygen dayglow emission at 297.2 nm performed durin...
International audienceThe properties of Martian aerosols are an integral part of the planetary clima...
Numerical experiments were completed examining the variability of key aspects of the Martian dust cy...
This work investigates surface dust lifting by Martian dust devils within a global-scale computer mo...
Abstract NASA's InSight landed in Elysium Planitia (~4.5°N,136°E) at Ls ~ 296° (November 2018), righ...
Super-rotation affects—and is affected by—the distribution of dust in the martian atmosphere. We mod...
International audienceA realistic spatio-temporal variability in atmospheric dust loading is essenti...
We report limb measurements of the oxygen dayglow emission at 297.2 nm performed during four Martian...