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A Comodulation Analysis of Atmospheric Energy Injection into the Ground Motion at InSight, Mars
  • +20
  • Constantinos Charalambous,
  • Alexander E Stott,
  • Tom Pike,
  • John McClean,
  • Tristram Warren,
  • Aymeric Spiga,
  • Donald Banfield,
  • Raphaël F. Garcia,
  • John Clinton,
  • Simon C. Stähler,
  • Sara Navarro López,
  • Philippe Henri Lognonné,
  • Taichi Kawamura,
  • Martin van Driel,
  • Maren Böse,
  • Savas Ceylan,
  • Amir Khan,
  • Anna Catherine Horleston,
  • Guénolé Orhand-Mainsant,
  • Luis Mora Sotomayor,
  • Naomi Murdoch,
  • Domenico Giardini,
  • William Bruce Banerdt
Constantinos Charalambous
Imperial College London

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Alexander E Stott
Imperial College London
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Tom Pike
Imperial College
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John McClean
Imperial College London
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Tristram Warren
Oxford
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Aymeric Spiga
Sorbonne Université (Faculté des Sciences)
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Donald Banfield
Cornell
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Raphaël F. Garcia
Institut Supérieur de l'Aéronautique et de l'Espace SUPAERO
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John Clinton
Swiss Seismological Service
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Simon C. Stähler
Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich
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Sara Navarro López
Centro de Astrobiología
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Philippe Henri Lognonné
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris et Université de Paris Diderot
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Taichi Kawamura
IPGP
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Martin van Driel
ETH Zürich
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Maren Böse
ETH Zurich
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Savas Ceylan
ETH Zurich
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Amir Khan
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
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Anna Catherine Horleston
University of Bristol
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Guénolé Orhand-Mainsant
ISAE-SUPAERO
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Luis Mora Sotomayor
Centro de Astrobiología
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Naomi Murdoch
ISAE SUPAERO
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Domenico Giardini
ETH Zürich
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William Bruce Banerdt
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Abstract

Seismic observations involve signals that can be easily masked by noise injection. For InSight, NASA's lander on Mars, the atmosphere is a significant noise contributor for two thirds of a Martian day, and while the noise is below that seen at even the quietest sites on Earth, the amplitude of seismic signals on Mars is also considerably lower requiring an understanding and quantification of environmental injection at unprecedented levels. Mars' ground and atmosphere provide a continuous coupled seismic system, and although atmospheric functions are of distinct origins, the superposition of these noise contributions is poorly understood, making separation a challenging task. We present a novel method for partitioning the observed signal into seismic and environmental contributions. Pressure and wind fluctuations are shown to exhibit temporal cross-frequency coupling across multiple bands, injecting noise that is neither random nor coherent. We investigate this through comodulation, quantifying the signal synchrony in seismic motion, wind and pressure. By working in the time-frequency domain, we discriminate the origins of underlying processes and provide the site's environmental sensitivity. Our method aims to create a virtual vault at InSight, shielding the seismometers with effective post-processing in lieu of a physical vault. This allows us to describe the environmental and seismic signals over a sequence of sols, to quantify the wind and pressure injection, and estimate the seismic content of possible Marsquakes with a signal-to-noise ratio that can be quantified in terms of environmental independence. Finally, we exploit the temporal energy correlations for source attribution of our observations.
Apr 2021Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets volume 126 issue 4. 10.1029/2020JE006538