Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations

Over the course of a Mars Year (MY) atmospheric temperatures vary enough between the furthest (Aphelion) and closest (Perihelion) points in Mars' orbit due to an Earth-like obliquity and elliptical orbit, creating two distinct seasons. Aphelion has cooler temperatures and a cross-equatorial Had...

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Main Author: Campbell, Charissa
Other Authors: Moores, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10315/42180
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spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/42180 2024-09-15T18:20:19+00:00 Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations Campbell, Charissa Moores, John 2024-07-18T21:25:31Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10315/42180 en eng https://hdl.handle.net/10315/42180 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Atmospheric sciences Planetary Science Mars Clouds Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2024 ftyorkuniv 2024-07-31T01:48:22Z Over the course of a Mars Year (MY) atmospheric temperatures vary enough between the furthest (Aphelion) and closest (Perihelion) points in Mars' orbit due to an Earth-like obliquity and elliptical orbit, creating two distinct seasons. Aphelion has cooler temperatures and a cross-equatorial Hadley cell revealing equatorial water-ice clouds. Perihelion has warmer temperatures that support increased dust activity such as dust-devils or dust storms. These two seasons have been observed from orbit and surface, with surface vehicles crucially important for understanding surface-to-atmosphere interactions. Aerosols were examined for wind direction and speed using movies from the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) rover and InSight lander due to their proximity. Similar Easterly wind directions during the Aphelion season for both landing sites helped pinpoint that observed aerosols were most likely aloft in the middle atmosphere, affected by the same large-scale circulation via Hadley cells. However, mission constraints such as power and data volume limit the amount of returnable data and the ability to fully understand these aerosols. Automated methods appear to show promising results based on an algorithm developed by a team from Curtin university and tested with known wind directions from MSL atmospheric movies. The Onboard Rover Cloud Algorithm (ORCA) could be used on future missions to significantly decrease data volume by simply returning a set of wind parameters without first downlinking images. To further expand low-cost options, an optical meteorological station was created based on the Phoenix Mars mission experiment that imaged the lidar beam shining within aerosols to calculate ice-water content. The Mars Atmospheric Panoramic camera and Laser Experiment (MAPLE) has a panoramic camera and multiple class 3R lasers to maximize returnable science in a minimal way. Field testing in dense fog in Newfoundland showed that MAPLE's lasers could detect fog decks up to 100 m above the camera during nighttime conditions. ... Thesis Newfoundland Orca York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Atmospheric sciences
Planetary Science
Mars
Clouds
spellingShingle Atmospheric sciences
Planetary Science
Mars
Clouds
Campbell, Charissa
Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations
topic_facet Atmospheric sciences
Planetary Science
Mars
Clouds
description Over the course of a Mars Year (MY) atmospheric temperatures vary enough between the furthest (Aphelion) and closest (Perihelion) points in Mars' orbit due to an Earth-like obliquity and elliptical orbit, creating two distinct seasons. Aphelion has cooler temperatures and a cross-equatorial Hadley cell revealing equatorial water-ice clouds. Perihelion has warmer temperatures that support increased dust activity such as dust-devils or dust storms. These two seasons have been observed from orbit and surface, with surface vehicles crucially important for understanding surface-to-atmosphere interactions. Aerosols were examined for wind direction and speed using movies from the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) rover and InSight lander due to their proximity. Similar Easterly wind directions during the Aphelion season for both landing sites helped pinpoint that observed aerosols were most likely aloft in the middle atmosphere, affected by the same large-scale circulation via Hadley cells. However, mission constraints such as power and data volume limit the amount of returnable data and the ability to fully understand these aerosols. Automated methods appear to show promising results based on an algorithm developed by a team from Curtin university and tested with known wind directions from MSL atmospheric movies. The Onboard Rover Cloud Algorithm (ORCA) could be used on future missions to significantly decrease data volume by simply returning a set of wind parameters without first downlinking images. To further expand low-cost options, an optical meteorological station was created based on the Phoenix Mars mission experiment that imaged the lidar beam shining within aerosols to calculate ice-water content. The Mars Atmospheric Panoramic camera and Laser Experiment (MAPLE) has a panoramic camera and multiple class 3R lasers to maximize returnable science in a minimal way. Field testing in dense fog in Newfoundland showed that MAPLE's lasers could detect fog decks up to 100 m above the camera during nighttime conditions. ...
author2 Moores, John
format Thesis
author Campbell, Charissa
author_facet Campbell, Charissa
author_sort Campbell, Charissa
title Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations
title_short Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations
title_full Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations
title_fullStr Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing the Martian Environment Through Surface Spacecraft Observations
title_sort characterizing the martian environment through surface spacecraft observations
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10315/42180
genre Newfoundland
Orca
genre_facet Newfoundland
Orca
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10315/42180
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
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