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Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer – Application to Martian atmosphere Helen Wang Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory April 2012
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Diameter (km)63783397 Gravity(m/s 2 )9.83.7 Tilt of axis (degree)23.525 Day23h, 56 min24h,37min Year (days)365687 Distance to Sun (AU) 11.5 Surface Pressure (mb) 10006 Earth – Mars Comparison
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Occasional mesospheric clouds on both planets Dust Water ice CO2 ice
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Mars atmospheric composition H 2 O: 10 pr μm~150ppm; 0-80 pr μm O 3 : 1 μm-atm=0.1DU~12ppb; 0-60 μm-atm H 2 O 2 : 0-40ppb CH 4 : 10ppb; space / time variability HCHO: 0.5ppm or < 3 ppb? SO 2 : < 1-2ppb
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Mars Albedo Map 1971
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Mars Albedo Map 2000
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[Cantor et al., 2007]
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MSSS
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Albedo before 2007 global dust storm
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Albedo after 2007 global dust storm
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Development of global dust storm from Hellas basin
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Development of planet-encircling dust storms through flushing events
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Regional and Local dust storms
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Dust devils and tracks HiRISE SPIRIT HiRISE
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Polar hoods and aphelion tropical cloud belt 60S 60N 180W180E N. Winter N. Summer
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Mars boundary layer water ice clouds and precipitation [Whiteway et al., 2009] LIDAR backscatter observed by the Phoenix lander
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OMEGA spectra with CO 2 clouds Mesospheric clouds in the Martian atmosphere MOC image Pathfinder image
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Thermal Emission Spectrometer spectra
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Seasonal and interannual variations of Martian dust Dust has great impact on Martian atmospheric thermal strucutre [Smith, 2008] MY 24MY 25MY 26
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water ice water vapor Seasonal & interannual variations of water ice clouds & water vapor Water vapor reflects water exchange among reservoirs in Martian water cycle controls Martian photochemistry, maintains atmos. composition stability [Smith, 2008] MY 24 MY 25MY 26
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Mars zonal temperature structure during Mars Year 24 [Banfield et al., 2003]
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Dominated by sun-synchrous diurnal tide
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Traveling waves in temperaure (K) at ~25km 6.5 sol 20 sol
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Vertical structure of traveling waves observed in TES temperature 20 sol 6.5 sol
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Frontal / Flushing Dust Storms
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Correlation between zonal m=3 traveling waves and flushing dust storms
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Vertical temperature structure of GCM simulated m = 3 traveling wave Lat m=3 traveling waves are confined to the first scale height
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Control run GCM simulations of m = 3 traveling waves without and with forcing of traveling dust front Traveling dust front increase m=3 waves which enhances further dust lifting
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Mars photochemistry CO 2 + hν → CO + O ; CO 2 + hν → CO + O(1D) O + CO + CO 2 → CO 2 + CO 2 very slow heterogeneous chemistry? O + HO 2 → OH + O 2 O + OH → O 2 + H HOx rapidly destroys ozone HO 2 + O 3 → OH + 2O 2 OH + O 3 → HO 2 + O 2 H 2 O + hν → H + OH; CO + OH → CO 2 + H HOx catalytic chemistry maintaining Martian atmosphere stability O(1D) + H 2 O → OH + OH O + O + CO 2 → O 2 + CO 2 ; O + O 2 + CO 2 → O 3 + CO 2 [Yung and DeMore, 1999]
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Absorption cross section of major absorbing species in the Martian atmosphere
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Extinction coefficient at 48km
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Actinic flux at different heights λ>200nm can reach the surface
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SPICAM UV spectra of Martian atmosphere [Perrier e tal., 2006]
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SPICAM seasonal evolution of nocturnal ozone layer [Lebonnois et al., 2006]
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General anti-correlation of ozone and water vapor SPICAM UV nadir ozone column abundance SPICAM NIR nadir water vapor column abundance [Perrier e tal., 2006] [Fedorova et al., 2006]
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[Mumma et al., 2009] High CH 4 in localized plumes during N. Summer Conventional model predicts CH 4 photochemical lifetime ~300 years Variations imply recent/continuous release from localized sources Terrestrial CH 4 : 90% by life, 10% geochemical Life on Mars? ~20ppb on average
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