The Atmospheric Response to an Unusual Early-Year Martian Dust Storm
- Cong Sun,
- Chengyun Yang,
- Tao Li,
- Dexin Lai,
- Xin Fang
Abstract
A regional dust storm was observed in the northern spring of Martian
Year 35, a period characterized by a relatively cold and clear
atmosphere. Both satellite observations and general circulation model
simulations reveal that the atmospheric temperature response
characteristics of this early regional dust storm closely resemble the
equatorial mirror of the C-type regional dust storm responses in the
Northern Hemisphere winter. Atmospheric heating in the dust-lifting
region was primarily driven by shortwave radiative heating of dust
particles. Anomalous cooling in the northern mesosphere and heating
responses in the southern troposphere were associated with
dust-modulated gravity waves and planetary waves, respectively. The
anomalous atmospheric waves during the dust storm significantly enhanced
the meridional circulation. Inhomogeneous heating due to dust
distribution enhanced southward meridional circulation in the lower
tropical troposphere, where the water vapor mixing ratio increased. As a
result, the meridional water transport significantly increased from the
Northern to the Southern Hemisphere during the dust event. Furthermore,
the water transport during the E Event showed significant longitudinal
asymmetry, highlighting the importance of the stationary eddy transport
term.30 Aug 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive 02 Sep 2024Published in ESS Open Archive