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Enhanced Super-rotation Before and During the 2018 Martian Global Dust Storm
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  • Kylash Rajendran,
  • Stephen Lewis,
  • James Andrew Holmes,
  • Paul Michael Streeter,
  • Anna A. Fedorova,
  • Manish Patel
Kylash Rajendran
The Open University, The Open University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Stephen Lewis
Open University, Open University
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James Andrew Holmes
Open University, Open University
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Paul Michael Streeter
Open University, Open University
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Anna A. Fedorova
Space Research Institute, Space Research Institute
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Manish Patel
Open University, Open University
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Abstract

Super-rotation affects - and is affected by - the distribution of dust in the martian atmosphere. We modelled this interaction during the 2018 global dust storm (GDS) of Mars Year 34 using data assimilation. Super-rotation increased by a factor of two at the peak of the GDS, as compared to the same period in the previous year which did not feature a GDS. A strong westerly jet formed in the tropical lower atmosphere, with strong easterlies above 60 km, as a result of momentum transport by thermal tides. Enhanced super-rotation is shown to have commenced 40 sols before the onset of the GDS, due to equatorward advection of dust from southern mid-latitudes. The uniform distribution of dust in the tropics resulted in a symmetric Hadley cell with a tropical upwelling branch that could efficiently transport dust vertically; this may have significantly contributed to the rapid expansion of the storm.
28 Aug 2021Published in Geophysical Research Letters volume 48 issue 16. 10.1029/2021GL094634