Thermal infrared properties of the Martian atmosphere. II - The 15-micron band measurements

Viking infrared thermal mapper observations of Mars in the 15-micron CO2 band reveal global atmospheric thermal behavior at the 0.3to 0.6-mbar level. Dust entrained by storms produces major modification of diurnal and latitudinal structure in the brightness temperature. In the dust-laden atmosphere...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martin, T. Z., Kieffer, H. H.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1979
Subjects:
91
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19790056620
Description
Summary:Viking infrared thermal mapper observations of Mars in the 15-micron CO2 band reveal global atmospheric thermal behavior at the 0.3to 0.6-mbar level. Dust entrained by storms produces major modification of diurnal and latitudinal structure in the brightness temperature. In the dust-laden atmosphere of southern spring and summer 1977, the brightness temperature was a maximum in late afternoon at a latitude well south of the subsolar latitude. Diurnal amplitude was as great as 30 K, while diurnal mean temperatures exceeded 220 K. Over the northern winter polar cap, the brightness temperature increased dramatically following the second global dust storm of 1977; even in regions of polar night the change was up to 80 K. Inversions of similar magnitude resulted, and the change in downward radiance was sufficient to modify substantially the rate of CO2 condensation at the surface.