An Observational Overview of Dusty Deep Convection in Martian Dust Storms

Author:

Heavens Nicholas G.1ORCID,Kass David M.2,Shirley James H.2,Piqueux Sylvain2,Cantor Bruce A.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Hampton University, Hampton, Virginia, and Space Science Institute, Boulder, Colorado

2. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California

3. Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego, California

Abstract

Abstract Deep convection, as used in meteorology, refers to the rapid ascent of air parcels in Earth’s troposphere driven by the buoyancy generated by phase change in water. Deep convection undergirds some of Earth’s most important and violent weather phenomena and is responsible for many aspects of the observed distribution of energy, momentum, and constituents (particularly water) in Earth’s atmosphere. Deep convection driven by buoyancy generated by the radiative heating of atmospheric dust may be similarly important in the atmosphere of Mars but lacks a systematic description. Here we propose a comprehensive framework for this phenomenon of dusty deep convection (DDC) that is supported by energetic calculations and observations of the vertical dust distribution and exemplary dusty deep convective structures within local, regional, and global dust storm activity. In this framework, DDC is distinct from a spectrum of weaker dusty convective activity because DDC originates from preexisting or concurrently forming mesoscale circulations that generate high surface dust fluxes, oppose large-scale horizontal advective–diffusive processes, and are thus able to maintain higher dust concentrations than typically simulated. DDC takes two distinctive forms. Mesoscale circulations that form near Mars’s highest volcanoes in dust storms of all scales can transport dust to the base of the upper atmosphere in as little as 2 h. In the second distinctive form, mesoscale circulations at low elevations within regional and global dust storm activity generate freely convecting streamers of dust that are sheared into the middle atmosphere over the diurnal cycle.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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