The Martian limb (that is, the observed ‘edge’ of the
planet) represents a unique window into the complex atmospheric phenomena
occurring there.
Clouds of ice crystals (CO2 ice or H2O ice)
have been observed numerous times by spacecraft and ground-based telescopes,
showing that clouds are typically layered and always confined below an altitude
of 100 kilometres ;
suspended dust has also been detected at altitudes up to 60 kilometres
during major dust storms.
Highly concentrated and localized patches of auroral
emission controlled by magnetic field anomalies in the crust have been observed
at an altitude of 130 kilometres .
Here we report the occurrence in March and April 2012
of two bright, extremely high-altitude plumes at the Martian terminator (the
day–night boundary) at 200 to 250 kilometres or more above the surface, and
thus well into the ionosphere and the exosphere. They were spotted at a
longitude of about 195° west, a latitude of about −45° (at Terra Cimmeria),
extended about 500 to 1,000
kilometres in both the north–south and east–west
directions, and lasted for about 10 days.
The features exhibited day-to-day variability, and
were seen at the morning terminator but not at the evening limb, which
indicates rapid evolution in less than 10 hours and a cyclic behaviour.
We used photometric measurements to explore two
possible scenarios and investigate their nature. For particles reflecting solar
radiation, clouds of CO2-ice or H2O-ice
particles with an effective radius of 0.1 micrometres are favoured over
dust.
Alternatively, the plume could arise from auroral
emission, of a brightness more than 1,000 times that of the Earth’s aurora,
over a region with a strong magnetic anomaly where aurorae have previously been
detected.
Nature, 16/02/2015
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου