Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis

One of the unique features of the Martian climate is the existence of CO2 ice clouds formed from the main atmospheric constituent. These clouds were thought to form only in the polar night, where the CO2 condenses on the winter pole. Recently, Mars Express has observed several occurrences of high-al...

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Main Authors: Määttänen, Anni, Montmessin, Franck, Gondet, Brigitte, Hoffmann, Harald, Scholten, Frank, Hauber, Ernst, Bibring, J.-P., Neukum, Gerhard
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/67437/
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2009/poster_programme/873
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author Määttänen, Anni
Montmessin, Franck
Gondet, Brigitte
Hoffmann, Harald
Scholten, Frank
Hauber, Ernst
Bibring, J.-P.
Neukum, Gerhard
author_facet Määttänen, Anni
Montmessin, Franck
Gondet, Brigitte
Hoffmann, Harald
Scholten, Frank
Hauber, Ernst
Bibring, J.-P.
Neukum, Gerhard
author_sort Määttänen, Anni
collection Unknown
description One of the unique features of the Martian climate is the existence of CO2 ice clouds formed from the main atmospheric constituent. These clouds were thought to form only in the polar night, where the CO2 condenses on the winter pole. Recently, Mars Express has observed several occurrences of high-altitude CO2 clouds mainly in the equatorial areas. We use observations by OMEGA (Bibring et al., 2004) and HRSC (Jaumann et al., 2007) to analyse these high-altitude CO2 cloud occurrences. As shown by Montmessin et al. (2007), the spectral signature of CO2 clouds seen in OMEGA spectra exhibits one or two distinct peaks that appear inside a strong CO2 gas absorption band centered at 4.3 microns. We have mapped this spectral signature with a 3-sigma detection method. The mapping of the clouds in three Martian years of OMEGA data have provided a cloud dataset of about 60 occurrences. These observations provide information on the spatial and seasonal distribution of CO2 cloud formation at the equatorial region and information on variations of cloud particle size, related to the variations in the spectral signature of the clouds. The clouds exhibit variable morphology from clearly convective type, round structures (about 15% of all cases), to more filamented, cirrus type clouds. We have also analysed some properties of the clouds (altitude, particle size, opacity) using two shadow observations by OMEGA. We will present the results acquired so far using the datasets of the two instruments. OMEGA shows that the clouds exhibit interannual variations, but in general the clouds are concentrated on specific spatial and seasonal bins, mainly around the equator and around Ls=45 and Ls=135, before and after the northern summer solstice. Most high-altitude clouds are observed in a longitudinally limited area, between 150 W and 30 E. During the first year of observations the cloud shadow was also observed on two orbits. The analysis of the cloud observations have revealed that the clouds are thick with near-infrared opacities (at 1 ...
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genre polar night
genre_facet polar night
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institution Open Polar
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op_relation Määttänen, Anni und Montmessin, Franck und Gondet, Brigitte und Hoffmann, Harald und Scholten, Frank und Hauber, Ernst und Bibring, J.-P. und Neukum, Gerhard (2009) Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis. EGU General Assembly 2009, 2009-04-19 - 2009-04-24, Vienna, Austria.
publishDate 2009
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spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:67437 2025-06-15T14:47:22+00:00 Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis Määttänen, Anni Montmessin, Franck Gondet, Brigitte Hoffmann, Harald Scholten, Frank Hauber, Ernst Bibring, J.-P. Neukum, Gerhard 2009 https://elib.dlr.de/67437/ http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2009/poster_programme/873 unknown Määttänen, Anni und Montmessin, Franck und Gondet, Brigitte und Hoffmann, Harald und Scholten, Frank und Hauber, Ernst und Bibring, J.-P. und Neukum, Gerhard (2009) Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis. EGU General Assembly 2009, 2009-04-19 - 2009-04-24, Vienna, Austria. Institut für Planetenforschung Konferenzbeitrag NonPeerReviewed 2009 ftdlr 2025-06-04T04:58:08Z One of the unique features of the Martian climate is the existence of CO2 ice clouds formed from the main atmospheric constituent. These clouds were thought to form only in the polar night, where the CO2 condenses on the winter pole. Recently, Mars Express has observed several occurrences of high-altitude CO2 clouds mainly in the equatorial areas. We use observations by OMEGA (Bibring et al., 2004) and HRSC (Jaumann et al., 2007) to analyse these high-altitude CO2 cloud occurrences. As shown by Montmessin et al. (2007), the spectral signature of CO2 clouds seen in OMEGA spectra exhibits one or two distinct peaks that appear inside a strong CO2 gas absorption band centered at 4.3 microns. We have mapped this spectral signature with a 3-sigma detection method. The mapping of the clouds in three Martian years of OMEGA data have provided a cloud dataset of about 60 occurrences. These observations provide information on the spatial and seasonal distribution of CO2 cloud formation at the equatorial region and information on variations of cloud particle size, related to the variations in the spectral signature of the clouds. The clouds exhibit variable morphology from clearly convective type, round structures (about 15% of all cases), to more filamented, cirrus type clouds. We have also analysed some properties of the clouds (altitude, particle size, opacity) using two shadow observations by OMEGA. We will present the results acquired so far using the datasets of the two instruments. OMEGA shows that the clouds exhibit interannual variations, but in general the clouds are concentrated on specific spatial and seasonal bins, mainly around the equator and around Ls=45 and Ls=135, before and after the northern summer solstice. Most high-altitude clouds are observed in a longitudinally limited area, between 150 W and 30 E. During the first year of observations the cloud shadow was also observed on two orbits. The analysis of the cloud observations have revealed that the clouds are thick with near-infrared opacities (at 1 ... Conference Object polar night Unknown
spellingShingle Institut für Planetenforschung
Määttänen, Anni
Montmessin, Franck
Gondet, Brigitte
Hoffmann, Harald
Scholten, Frank
Hauber, Ernst
Bibring, J.-P.
Neukum, Gerhard
Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis
title Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis
title_full Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis
title_fullStr Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis
title_full_unstemmed Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis
title_short Martian equatorial CO2 clouds: a complementary OMEGA and HRSC data analysis
title_sort martian equatorial co2 clouds: a complementary omega and hrsc data analysis
topic Institut für Planetenforschung
topic_facet Institut für Planetenforschung
url https://elib.dlr.de/67437/
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2009/poster_programme/873