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Science 5 December 1997: Vol. 278. no. 5344, pp. 1752 - 1758 DOI: 10.1126/science.278.5344.1752
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Reports
The Mars Pathfinder Atmospheric Structure Investigation/Meteorology (ASI/MET) Experiment
J. T. Schofield,
J. R. Barnes,
D. Crisp,
R. M. Haberle,
S. Larsen,
J. A. Magalhães,
J. R. Murphy,
A. Seiff,
G. Wilson
The Mars Pathfinder atmospheric structure investigation/meteorology
(ASI/MET) experiment measured the vertical density, pressure, and temperature structure of the martian atmosphere from the surface to
160 km, and monitored surface meteorology and climate for 83 sols (1 sol = 1 martian day = 24.7 hours). The atmospheric structure and the weather record are similar to those observed by the Viking 1 lander (VL-1) at the same latitude, altitude, and season 21 years ago, but there are differences related to diurnal effects and the
surface properties of the landing site. These include a cold nighttime
upper atmosphere; atmospheric temperatures that are 10 to 12 degrees
kelvin warmer near the surface; light slope-controlled winds; and dust
devils, identified by their pressure, wind, and temperature signatures.
The results are consistent with the warm, moderately dusty atmosphere
seen by VL-1.
J. T. Schofield and D. Crisp, Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
California Institute of Technology, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, CA
91109, USA.
J. R. Barnes, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon
State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA.
R. M. Haberle, Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
94035-1000, USA.
S. Larsen, Wind Energy and Atmospheric Physics, Risoe National
Laboratory, AMV-125, Post Office Box 49, Roskilde, Denmark DK-4000.
J. A. Magalhães, J. R. Murphy, A. Seiff, San Jose State
University Foundation, San Jose, CA, and Ames Research Center, Moffett
Field, CA 94035-1000, USA.
G. Wilson, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, and Ames
Research Center, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000, USA.
The ASI/MET experiment
consists of a suite of sensors designed to measure the vertical
structure of the atmosphere during entry, descent, and landing (EDL)
and to study martian surface meteorology and climate for the duration
of the Pathfinder mission (1, 2). In situ
vertical structure measurements were made only twice by the Viking
entry vehicles (3), both during the daytime. In addition to
adding a third profile, ASI/MET provides the first nighttime
observation, giving information about the diurnal variation of vertical
structure, particularly in the upper atmosphere, which is inaccessible
to existing remote-sensing techniques. Both Viking landers obtained
records of atmospheric pressure, temperature, and wind velocity at the
surface that extended over several Mars years. More recent Earth-based,
disk-averaged microwave observations have been interpreted to indicate
episodic cooling of the martian lower atmosphere by about 20 K relative
to the conditions observed during the Viking missions (4).
By continuing the Viking record after 21 years, ASI/MET results are
able to determine whether martian meteorology and climate have changed or remained stable in the late northern summer. Improved measurement sensitivity and temporal resolution (2) also reveal
phenomena not seen by Viking and, together with temperature
measurements at three levels, give better information on the exchange
of heat and momentum between the atmosphere and the surface.
The ASI/MET experiment combined accelerometer and MET instruments
(2). The accelerometer instrument contained science and engineering accelerometers that each monitored accelerations along three orthogonal axes. In each axis, the maximum sensitivity was 20 µm/s2 [2 × 10-6 Earth
gravities (g)], and the accelerations expected during EDL were covered by commandable measurement ranges of 16mg,
800mg, and 40g full-scale. The MET instrument
consisted of pressure, temperature, and wind sensors. Pressure was
measured through a 1-m inlet tube that was exposed to the atmosphere
during parachute descent as well as after landing (1, 2).
The pressure measurements have a maximum sensitivity of 0.25 µbar,
which is more than a factor of 100 better than that available to the
Viking landers (5). All the MET temperature and wind sensors
are mounted on a mast 1.1 m high, deployed at the end of a lander
petal to isolate it from spacecraft thermal contamination (1,
2). Atmospheric temperature was measured by four thermocouples:
one designed to measure temperature during parachute descent and three
designed for surface boundary layer measurements 25, 50, and 100 cm
above the base of the mast. All four thermocouples have time constants of 1 to 2 s and sensitivities of 0.01 K. Wind was measured by a
six-segment hot-wire sensor at the top of the mast, 1.1 m above the mast base. The wires are heated by a current passed in series through all six segments, and the temperature differences between low
and high current modes for each segment are used to determine wind
speed and direction.
The accelerometer and MET instruments recorded data continuously
throughout EDL until about 1 min after impact at about 03:00 local solar time (LST). Regular surface pressure, temperature, and wind
measurements by the MET instrument began about 4 hours after impact at
07:00 LST on sol 1 (1 sol = 1 martian day = 24.7 hours), and the MET mast was deployed at 13:30 LST.
The science accelerometer detected the upper atmosphere 160 km above
the landing site when the entry vehicle had a velocity of 7.4 km/s
relative to the atmosphere and a flight path angle 14.8° below the
local horizontal. 1.5 min later, the entry vehicle experienced a peak
deceleration of 15.9g at an altitude of 33 km. After 3 min
(9 km) the parachute deployed, and at 3.4 min (7.4 km) the heat shield
separated from the lander, allowing the pressure sensor to begin
unobstructed measurements of the atmosphere. The inflation of
shock-absorbing airbags at 5.1 min (0.3 km) terminated the unobstructed
pressure measurements, and descent rocket firing at 5.2 min (0.1 km)
ended the direct measurement of aerodynamic decelerations. The first
impact of the probe with the martian surface occurred 5.3 min after it
entered the atmosphere. In the first minute after impact, the lander
bounced 15 times and pressure sensor data indicated that it rolled
10 m vertically downhill. It came to rest about a minute later at
a site 3389.7 km from the center of mass of Mars (6).
Surface acceleration measurements of 3.716 m/s2 agree with
values of 3.717 m/s2 calculated for the lander location and
height (7), providing a verification of accelerometer gain
calibration.
Because the engineering accelerometers were used to control parachute
deployment and remained in their least sensitive 40g scale,
atmospheric profiles were derived from science accelerometer data only,
which were logged at 32 Hz throughout EDL. MET pressure and temperature
data were collected at 2 Hz during the parachute descent and landing
phases of EDL. However, spacecraft design constraints did not allow the
descent temperature sensor to be exposed to the free flow around the
lander, so that direct atmospheric temperature measurements were not
possible (2, 8).
For the 30-day primary landed mission, 51 equally spaced MET
measurement sessions were made each day to monitor the atmospheric diurnal cycle and synoptic (day-to-day) variations. These 3-min sessions sampled the atmosphere at 4-s intervals and were interspersed with 15-min and 1-hour sessions of 1-s sampling to monitor the surface
boundary layer. The boundary layer sessions were repeated as frequently
as allowed by data volume, in a pattern that sampled all local times of
day as rapidly as possible. Finally, on sol 25, a 24-hour session was
executed that sampled science data continuously at 4-s intervals for a
complete daily cycle. The continuous MET observations desired during
the primary mission were interrupted by spacecraft computer resets. One
of these resets was associated with errors in MET software, and the
measurements were limited to the nighttime from sols 12 to 17, until
the errors were corrected.
Entry, descent, and landing. Atmospheric density,
pressure, and temperature profiles were derived from ASI/MET
deceleration measurements during Pathfinder EDL and compared with VL-1
results (Figs. 1 and 2). The mean solar forcing of the martian
atmosphere at the time of the Pathfinder and VL-1 profiles was similar.
Solar longitudes (Ls) of 98° (VL-1) and 142°
(Pathfinder) correspond to a seasonal difference from mid- to late
summer and to a smaller Mars-sun distance at the time of the Pathfinder
profile. Solar activity, as measured by sunspot counts, was
near-minimum for both profiles, the lower atmosphere had comparable
amounts of dust (9), and the two landings were at similar
latitudes and longitudes on Mars. However, the different time of day
(03:00 LST for Pathfinder versus 16:15 LST for
VL-1) and the 21 years separating the two entry profiles suggest that
diurnal and secular effects could be important in understanding their
differences.
Fig. 1.
(left). The atmospheric
density profile derived from ASI/MET. The solid lines give the mean
atmospheric density profile derived from the accelerometer data and
profiles reflecting ±2 uncertainties in density based on
uncertainties in the entry velocity and the finite digital resolution
of the instrument. Errors in aerodynamic characteristics are not
included but are not expected to change the error envelopes
substantially. Further work with the accelerometer and pressure data
will allow us to extend the density profile down to the surface, where
the MET observations of pressure and temperature indicate an
atmospheric density of 1.76 × 10-2
kg/m3, marked by an oval on the x axis of the
figure. Results from the VL-1 atmospheric structure instrument (ASI)
(2, 3) and the Viking 1 upper atmosphere mass spectrometer
(UAMS) are also plotted for comparison (2,
3).
Fig. 2.
(right). The
atmospheric temperature profile derived from the Pathfinder atmospheric
density profile. Temperature profiles corresponding to the nominal and
±2 density profiles of Fig. 1 are represented by solid lines. The
hydrostatic equation is integrated to derive a pressure profile from
the density profile, and temperature is calculated from density and
pressure with the use of the ideal gas law. To begin the integration,
an upper boundary temperature is determined from the density scale
height at the upper boundary. Uncertainties in this temperature affect
the derived profiles significantly only above 125 km. In order to
derive temperatures, we have constructed a molecular weight versus
atmospheric density model based on the results of the Viking UAMS
(29). At present, we have no way of quantifying the
accuracy of this model, which influences temperature above 120 km. At
lower altitudes, the martian atmosphere is well mixed, with a constant
molecular weight of 43.49. Temperature profiles from the VL-1 ASI and
UAMS experiments (2, 3), the CO2 condensation
temperature profile, and the surface temperature measured by the
Pathfinder MET instrument (circle) are also shown for
comparison.
[View Larger Versions of these Images (18 + 21K GIF file)]
For an entry vehicle, atmospheric density is directly related to
aerodynamic deceleration, velocity relative to the atmosphere, and
aerodynamic characteristics (2). Deceleration was measured directly; velocity and position can be reconstructed by integrating the
equations of motion using the observed decelerations and an initial
velocity and position; and Pathfinder entry vehicle aerodynamic characteristics are known from computational aerodynamic simulations and laboratory experiments.
Atmospheric densities measured by Pathfinder varied from ~5 × 10-11 kg/m3 at the threshold of
detection to 8 × 10 3 kg/m3 immediately
before parachute release at 9 km (Fig.
1). From 160 to 90 km, densities range
from a factor of 5 lower than VL-1 values near and above 120 km to a
factor of 2.5 lower near 90 km. The increase in density between 90 and
80 km, which corresponds to a deep temperature minimum (Fig.
2), raises the Pathfinder densities at
lower altitudes to values slightly lower than VL-1 densities. The lower
values of density, and therefore pressure, encountered by Pathfinder
below 30 km are generally consistent with the lower overall mass and
surface pressure of the martian atmosphere at the time of the
Pathfinder landing (10). The decreased surface pressure
results from the annual variation in atmospheric mass caused by
condensation and sublimation from the polar caps (11).
The martian thermosphere, where temperature increases rapidly
with altitude because of heating by solar extreme ultraviolet radiation, is evident above 125 km in the Pathfinder profile
(Fig. 2). Although the uncertainties in the derived temperatures at these altitudes are large, it appears that Pathfinder temperatures are
close to or slightly higher than those measured by VL-1.
From 65 to 125 km, observed temperatures were, on average, 20 K lower
than those observed by VL-1 (Fig. 2). This contrast is responsible for
the lower Pathfinder densities above 90 km. Because radiative time
constants reach a minimum in this altitude range, a large response to
diurnal forcing is a likely explanation for this difference
(12). The temperature minimum of 92 K at 80 km is the lowest
temperature ever measured in the martian atmosphere and may result from
the superposition of waves, such as thermal tides, on the overall
nighttime cooling. Tides propagate from the lower atmosphere with
amplitudes that increase with altitude.
At 80 km, the Pathfinder temperature profile is lower than the
CO2 condensation temperature (Fig. 2). The lower
temperature may result from supercooling or from inaccuracies in the
vapor pressure curve for CO2 (13), but it is
possible that CO2 could be condensing at these levels to
form high-altitude clouds. Observations by the imager for the Mars
Pathfinder (IMP) of sky brightening well before the expected start of
dawn may indicate the presence of such clouds, although the substantial
morning clouds identified in images of the eastern horizon before
sunrise are almost certainly water clouds formed at much lower levels
(9).
Below 60 km, temperatures measured by Pathfinder are higher than
those measured by VL-1 down to 35 km and are similar or slightly lower
at lower altitudes down to 16.5 km (Fig. 2). These differences are
consistent with minor variability in dust content and are also within
the amplitudes expected from vertically propagating atmospheric waves
such as tides (10). In view of the similar solar forcing, it
is not surprising that the Pathfinder and VL-1 profiles are comparable
in the lower atmosphere. However, Earth-based, disk-averaged microwave
observations over the past 10 to 15 years have been used to suggest
that the martian lower atmosphere undergoes episodes of cooling, which
are characterized by reduced solar-absorbing dust content and 20 K
lower temperatures relative to the conditions observed during the
Viking mission (4). The Pathfinder entry profile shows no
evidence for substantial cooling of the lower atmosphere (Fig. 2),
although microwave profiles obtained before and after landing suggested
that a cool atmosphere would be found (14). Furthermore, IMP
observations yield atmospheric dust opacities of 0.5 (9),
which are comparable to those found by VL-1 at the same season. These
opacities are consistent with our temperature profile observations.
Finally, it is unlikely that Pathfinder entered a locally dusty and
anomalously warm region, as dust opacities remained stable throughout
the 30-day primary mission (9).
Below 16.5 km a strong thermal inversion is present in the Pathfinder
data, where temperature decreases from 200 to 181 K at 10 km (Fig. 2).
This inversion is at too high an altitude to be the strong thermal
inversion in the lowest few kilometers of the nighttime diurnal thermal
boundary layer on Mars predicted by radiative-convective models and
one-dimensional dynamical boundary layer models (15,
16). At the base of the Pathfinder profile, temperature
appears to increase with decreasing altitude again and can easily
achieve the observed surface temperature, including predicted
near-surface thermal inversions, without exceeding the adiabatic lapse
rate.
The temperature minimum in the 10-km inversion is well below the
condensation temperature of water vapor in the martian atmosphere, assuming that the 10 precipitable micrometers of water derived from IMP
measurements are uniformly mixed (9). This inversion may
mark the altitude of clouds seen in IMP images before sunrise (9) and near the low-latitude morning terminator in Hubble Space Telescope images (17), although the height of these
clouds is not well known. After sunrise, the clouds burned off rapidly, and the inversion may have disappeared. What triggered the formation of
a strong temperature inversion is not known, but possible mechanisms include the horizontal advection of cooler air at 10 km and vertically propagating finite-amplitude gravity waves excited by surface topography in the strongly stratified near-surface nighttime boundary layer (18). Once clouds formed, thermal emission from the
cloud tops could have enhanced the intensity of the inversion at night.
Measurements made after landing. The pressure,
temperature, and wind velocity data acquired by ASI/MET during the
landed mission allow the variability of the martian atmosphere at the Ares Vallis landing site to be studied during the midsummer season on
short, daily, synoptic (day-to-day), and seasonal time scales. This
reveals not only the local properties of the atmosphere and its
interaction with the surface but also more global information on
atmospheric dust loading, circulation, and the seasonal CO2 cycle. Comparisons with VL-1 data taken at the same time of year can be
used to identify longer-term climate changes.
Pressure data. During sols 1 through 30, surface pressure at
the landing site underwent substantial daily variations of 0.2 to 0.3 mbar, which were associated primarily with the large thermal tides in
the thin martian atmosphere (11) (Fig.
3A). Daily pressure cycles were
characterized by a strong semidiurnal oscillation, with two minima and
two maxima per sol, together with diurnal and higher-order components,
although there was considerable day-to-day variability (Fig. 3B). The
presence of a large semidiurnal tidal oscillation is indicative of
atmospheric dustiness over broad regions of Mars and over an altitude
range of at least 10 to 20 km (19).
Fig. 3.
(A) Time-averaged surface
pressures measured by the MET instrument over the first 30 sols of the
Pathfinder landed mission. The averages are primarily over the 3-min
default measurement sessions, of which there are nominally 51 per sol;
and the resulting points have been connected with straight lines,
except for sols 12 through 15, where cubic spline interpolation has
been used to fill data gaps of about 8 hours in length. MET operation
was restricted to nighttime observations during this period to prevent spacecraft resets associated with MET data collection. The major gaps
in the data set at sols 1, 8, 11, and 17 are caused by various spacecraft software reset and downlink problems. After sol 17, the
reset problems associated with MET were corrected, and continuous sampling was resumed. The long-term trend in pressure is represented by
a third-order polynomial fit to the data (solid curve). (B) Diurnal pressure cycles for sols 9 (solid line) and 19 (dashed line),
illustrating the observed day-to-day changes in the diurnal pressure
cycle and allowing details of the daily pressure variation to be seen
more clearly.
[View Larger Versions of these Images (45 + 19K GIF file)]
A long-term trend in daily mean pressure was also seen. A third-order
polynomial fit to the data shows that mean pressure fell slowly at the
beginning of the period and rose at the end, with a minimum just under
6.7 mbar near sol 20 (Ls ~ 153°) (Fig. 3A).
This time corresponds to the annual deep minimum in the seasonal pressure cycle associated with CO2 condensation and
sublimation in the polar regions of Mars and was seen previously by the
Viking landers (11).
The ASI/MET pressure sensor detected a variety of pressure variations
on relatively short time scales. These ranged from seconds to hours and
had magnitudes of 1 to 50 µbar. The shorter time-scale variations
(<10 to 15 min) appear to be correlated with wind and temperature
fluctuations and tend to be largest during late morning and early
afternoon, when the boundary layer is most turbulent. The most dramatic
pressure features were minima of 10 to 50 µbar, usually less than a
minute in duration, associated with vortices (dust devils) passing over
the lander. A particularly good example was seen during the continuous
sampling of sol 25.
Temperature data. In common with the single-level
observations made by VL-1 at the same season, the diurnal temperature variations at the three Pathfinder levels repeat from day to day with a
high degree of consistency. The diurnal cycle was sampled particularly
well on sol 25 (Fig. 4). For the top mast
thermocouple, a typical maximum temperature was 263 K at
14:15 LST and a typical minimum was 197 K at
05:15 LST, shortly before sunrise. Because of the low
density of the martian atmosphere, near-surface atmospheric temperatures are influenced by the surface temperature cycle, which is
driven by solar heating during the day and infrared cooling at night.
For this reason, diurnal temperature extremes at the bottom of the mast
exceeded those at the top (Fig. 4). Temperatures at the top of the mast
(1.1 m) were greater by 10 K during the day and 12 K at night than
those seen at 1.6 m by VL-1, probably because of the lower albedo
and greater thermal inertia of the surface at the Pathfinder landing
site.
Fig. 4.
(top). The diurnal
variation of atmospheric temperature measured by the top (red), middle
(black), and bottom (blue) mast thermocouples, from 06:00 LST
on sol 25 to 06:00 LST on sol 26. These thermocouples are
respectively 100, 50, and 25 cm above the plane of the lander solar
panels. Temperatures are sampled continuously at 4-s intervals
throughout this period, but the plots use 30-point (2-min) running
means for clarity (this smoothing reduces the amplitude and frequency
of the fluctuations that are present in the raw data).
Fig. 5.
(bottom). The data of Fig. 4 plotted as
temperature deviations from the mean of all three thermocouples.
Sampling times and data smoothing are identical to those of Fig.
4.
[View Larger Versions of these Images (21 + 35K GIF file)]
The diurnal variation of the vertical temperature gradient was
also consistent from day to day. At sunrise, the atmosphere is
typically stably stratified, and cool dense air lies near the surface
(Fig. 5). As the surface warms, the air
mass is heated from below. By about 06:30 LST, all three mast
temperatures are about equal, indicating that the near-surface
atmosphere is neutrally stable, because isothermal and adiabatic lapse
rates are indistinguishable over a vertical range of 75 cm. By
07:30 LST, ground heating exceeds the ability of the
atmosphere to transfer surface heating by conduction, the temperature
gradient reverses, the atmosphere becomes unstable, and convection
begins. Turbulent mixing carries heat from the surface and is revealed
by large rapid temperature fluctuations of up to 15 to 20 K observed
during the remainder of the morning and early afternoon. Later in the
afternoon, the surface cools and turbulent mixing diminishes (Fig. 4).
By 16:45 LST, the thermal profile is neutral and what surface
winds are observed convect heat quickly. Shortly afterward, surface
cooling causes the temperature gradient to invert, and the surface
boundary layer becomes stably stratified for the duration of the night.
Major nighttime temperature fluctuations are caused by downslope winds
that disturb the surface boundary layer (Fig. 4).
Large near-surface temperature gradients of 10 to 15 K are probably a
common feature of the martian daytime boundary layer. Because of low
atmospheric densities, the convective heat flux is unable to cool the
surface as efficiently as on Earth, where atmospheric fluxes typically
remove 80 to 90% of the net surface radiative flux under convective
conditions.
Wind data. The ASI/MET wind sensor measured wind speed and
direction 1.1 m above the base of the mast. Accurate speed determination requires further calibration of the relation between wind
speed, air temperature, and sensor hot wire overheat under Mars surface
conditions and is not yet available. Here we discuss wind direction and
approximate speed based on azimuthal variations of wire overheat, which
are a function of both wind speed and direction.
For sols 1 to 30, wind direction generally rotated in a
clockwise manner through all the points of the compass during the course of 1 sol (Fig. 6). This
rotation was not uniform. Winds were consistently from the south in the
late night and early morning hours and then rotated steadily through
west, north, and east during the day. Over the 30-day period studied,
nighttime wind direction was remarkably constant, but considerably more
scatter was seen during the day (Fig. 6). The most anomalous wind
variations were observed on sols 8 through 10, when northeasterly winds
were absent from the daily cycle. A pronounced reduction in the daily variation of surface pressure was seen in the same time interval (Fig.
3).
Fig. 6.
Time-averaged wind direction measured by the
MET instrument over the first 30 sols of the Pathfinder landed mission,
plotted as a function of LST. Each point represents an average over a 3-min default measurement session. Wind direction is defined as follows: 0° and 360° (northerly), 90° (easterly), 180°
(southerly), and 270° (westerly).
[View Larger Version of this Image (42K GIF file)]
The recurrent southerly wind from late evening through morning is
consistent with a drainage flow down Ares Vallis, which rises to the
south of the lander (1); and the northerly wind seen in the
afternoon is indicative of flow up Ares Vallis. Although the clockwise
rotation of the wind vector agrees with that expected from the
westward-migrating classical diurnal thermal tide, the time-phasing of
wind direction throughout the day does not. The classical tidal drive
would generate a westerly maximum near 18:00 LST and a
southerly maximum at about 12:00 LST. It therefore appears that local topography, or possibly nonclassical tides, are controlling the wind direction at the Pathfinder location during midsummer.
Winds measured at the VL-1 site at this same season 11 Mars years
earlier (1976) were generally weak (<6 m/s), exhibited a time-averaged
northwesterly direction, and were approximately upslope during the
afternoon and downslope during the night and early morning. Increased
wind speeds accompanied the increased pressure oscillations seen during
the several sols surrounding Ls = 150 (20). If the winds are slope-driven at this season, the
differences between VL-1 and Pathfinder winds are expected to reflect
differences in the magnitude and direction of the slope at the two
sites. Finally, preliminary estimates suggest that wind speeds were
comparable with or lower than those measured by VL-1 at the same time
of year. Speeds were generally less than 5 to 10 m/s, except during the
passage of dust devils, and were often less than 1 m/s in the morning
hours. This may be consistent with the lower slope at the Pathfinder
site.
Synoptic and seasonal variations. Synoptic and seasonal
variability in the martian atmosphere at the Ares Vallis landing site
are seen most clearly in the pressure data (Fig. 3). In particular, the
annual pressure cycle reached a minimum at about sol 20, corresponding to the greatest mass of the southern seasonal polar cap
(11), although the precise timing of the pressure minimum
can be up to 5 sols earlier and 1 sol later, depending on exactly how
the pressure data are analyzed. The Pathfinder minimum appears to have
occurred about 6 sols later than that seen during the first year at the
VL-1 site (21), which seems to imply more or longer lasting
CO2 condensation on the south polar cap. Variations from year to year of at least several sols in the timing of the annual pressure minimum were observed by the two Viking landers
(22).
Small synoptic variations in amplitude of less than 3 to 4 K in
temperature and 20 to 30 µbar in pressure are present in the ASI/MET
data, after diurnal fluctuations and longer term trends are removed.
Variations of comparable magnitude were found in the VL-1 data for this
season; the greatest variance was at relatively long (10- to 30-sol)
periodicities (21, 23). Missing data and the
limited temporal extent of the available Pathfinder observations make
the estimation of periodicities difficult. On the basis of the VL-1
data and pre-landing general circulation model predictions for the
Pathfinder site, it is expected that synoptic variations of much larger
amplitude will begin as the transition to the fall and winter weather
regime takes place (10, 21). There is evidence that this is beginning to happen at the end of the Pathfinder pressure
record.
Thermal tides. For the first 30 days of the landed
mission, the semidiurnal tide was the largest component of the daily variation in surface pressure (Fig. 7).
Its amplitude is generally similar to that found by VL-1 and is
consistent with a visible optical depth of global dust of order 0.5 (19). This value is comparable to that measured by the IMP
(9). Given the long vertical wavelengths associated with the
semidiurnal tide, its measured amplitudes further suggest that the dust
was deeply distributed in the atmosphere and was not confined to a
shallow layer near the surface. This inference is consistent with the
dust scale height of about 13 km deduced from IMP measurements
(9) and with our entry profiles, which show a relatively
warm lower atmosphere below 60 km. However, as mentioned earlier, a
deeply distributed global dust haze is not consistent with Earth-based
microwave measurements for this same period (14).
Fig. 7.
(A) The
amplitude of the diurnal (black diamonds) and semidiurnal (open
diamonds) surface pressure tides for the first 30 sols of the
Pathfinder landed mission. Amplitudes are normalized relative to the
mean pressure for each day. (B) The phase, in LST, of the
diurnal (black diamonds) and semidiurnal (open diamonds) surface
pressure tides. Enough pressure data were collected to characterize the
thermal tide on 20 sols. Pressure measurements from each of these sols
were fitted with a cubic spline, from which 51 equally spaced intervals
were sampled to define the tide.
[View Larger Version of this Image (19K GIF file)]
The amplitude of the diurnal tide was smaller and more variable. On
sols 5 and 9, normalized amplitudes were down to 0.002 (Fig. 7), which
is more than a factor of 2 smaller than anything measured by Viking.
The variation seen by Pathfinder is somewhat systematic in that diurnal
amplitudes were low during the first 5 to 10 sols, gradually rose to
values of around 0.010 by sol 20, then declined to rather low values
again by sol 27. Phase also varied during this period, retarding during
the first 15 sols then advancing during the last 15 sols. The amplitude
of the diurnal tide is sensitive to the calibration of the pressure sensor, which is still preliminary. However, the time variation of
amplitude and phase is relatively insensitive to calibration.
These variations in the diurnal tide suggest that it was
modulated by interference effects between the sun-following westward tide and the topographically induced, resonantly enhanced, eastward traveling, diurnal kelvin mode (19, 20,
24). One possibility is that the interaction is between
eastward and westward modes of comparable amplitude, where the eastward
mode period is first slightly greater than and later slightly less than
1 sol. Alternatively, the eastward and westward modes could have
similar periods, and amplitudes may vary with time. The modeling of
this interaction may help to distinguish between these two
possibilities.
Nighttime temperature inflections. ASI/MET temperature
measurements show that, on average, atmospheric temperatures fall
monotonically through the evening and night until sunrise. On most
nights, however, the steady decline in temperature was interrupted by
one or more inflections in the gradient, where the temperature fell
less rapidly or even rose before resuming its downward trend. Striking
features of this kind are seen in Fig. 4 at 18:15,
19:00, 20:40, and 03:05 LST and are
particularly marked in top mast thermocouple temperatures.
Temperature inflections seen in the VL-1 temperature data set
were attributed to radiative effects associated with the formation of
ground fogs (25). At the Pathfinder landing site,
temperatures are about 10 K warmer than those of VL-1 at night, and
condensation is unlikely, given the 10 precipitable micrometers of
water measured by the IMP (9). However, there was a positive
correlation between increased wind speed and the observed thermocouple
temperature inflections. Increased horizontal flow may have disturbed
the strong temperature inversion that developed at night, bringing warmer air from aloft down to thermocouple heights through enhanced vertical mixing. After the nighttime warming episodes, temperatures fell rapidly in conjunction with substantial reductions in wind speed.
The nighttime temperature inflections occurred in the presence of
southerly winds and cannot be produced by thermal contamination from
the body of the spacecraft, which is located to the northwest of the
MET mast.
Dust devils. Short-term variations in measured surface
pressure, wind velocity, and air temperature over periods of tens of
seconds to minutes suggest that small-scale convective vortices passed
through the Pathfinder lander site. During the passage of one of these
features, pressure fell and recovered rapidly, accompanied by abrupt
shifts in wind direction. These events, which we refer to as dust
devils, are probably similar in character to features noted in the VL-1
and VL-2 meteorology data (26) and may have been seen by the
Viking orbiter cameras (27). The narrow, well-defined
pressure minimum is the most characteristic feature of these vortices,
but it was not seen in the Viking lander pressure record because of
poor resolution and coarse temporal sampling. There are currently no
Pathfinder lander images to indicate whether the apparent vortices
entrain dust, but the passage of a particularly large feature on sol 62 was correlated with a short-lived reduction of about 1.5% in the power
generated by the Pathfinder solar panels.
A dust devil event at 14:15 LST on sol 25 has the characteristics of a clockwise-rotating vortex traveling toward
the south-southeast (160°), with the vortex center passing west and
south of the lander (Fig. 8). During this
event, pressure fell 0.028 mbar in 24 s to a minimum, followed by
a more rapid rise of 0.027 mbars in 8 s. The pressure minimum was
accompanied by a local temperature maximum at all three thermocouple
heights. These temperature maxima are themselves embedded in a
pronounced temperature minimum, which extended 30 to 40 s before
and after the pressure minimum. Wind direction rotated from
northwesterly, which was the mean flow direction before the vortex
arrived, through north to northeasterly in the 40 s preceding the
pressure minimum, before shifting abruptly through northerly to
westerly at and just after the pressure minimum. Wind direction slowly
returned to north-northwesterly over the minutes following the pressure
minimum. This pattern is consistent with a clockwise-rotating vortex
embedded in an ambient flow that has a speed less than the vortex
rotational speed (26).
Fig. 8.
Pressure, wind, and temperature changes
associated with a small-scale vortex, or dust devil, passing through
the Pathfinder landing site. The measurements were taken at 4-s
intervals.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
Boundary layer results. The near-surface boundary layer of
the martian atmosphere can be described by "universal" scaling laws
involving dimensionless coefficients determined from measurements in
Earth's atmosphere. The Viking and Pathfinder measurements provide us
with an opportunity to test this universality by using measurements in
another atmosphere. Although the martian atmosphere differs in many
respects from our own, most of the universal relations are expected to
be valid, based on the analysis of Viking data (28).
Relative to Viking, the Pathfinder measurements have the
following advantages for boundary layer studies. Temperature
measurements at several heights allow for a more direct
determination of the vertical temperature gradient, and the
successful MET sampling strategy has ensured that turbulence and
profile data with high temporal resolution (1 Hz or better) are
available over a wide variety of conditions, with good systematic
coverage of diurnal and interdiurnal variability.
As an example of the analysis of turbulence
characteristics from Pathfinder, we show an average temperature power
spectrum obtained from the Fourier decomposition of several temperature time series (Fig. 9). Individual spectra
are scaled by the appropriate temperature scale
T*, which, following the
Monin-Obuchov formulation, is the most important scaling parameter for
both vertical profiles and spectra (28). The
T* values scaling the spectra were
derived from the measured temperature gradients, assuming close to
neutral thermal stability due to the proximity of the ground (0.25 m), although T* ranges from -5 K to
+0.2 K. Although simplified, the scaling does a reasonable job in
collapsing individual spectra and hence in supporting the applicability
of the Monin-Obuchov scaling laws.
Fig. 9.
An average power spectrum
S(f) for the martian atmosphere (dashed
line) is compared to a similar spectrum from Earth obtained under
weakly unstable conditions (bold line). The average spectrum is derived
from night- and daytime power spectra for 10-min martian atmosphere
temperature time series measured by the bottom mast thermocouple. The
spectra are normalized by the turbulence temperature scale
T* derived from the
temperature profiles, assuming a logarithmic profile of
T(z) = T*/
Ln(z/z0), where is Von Karman's
constant and z is altitude, and plotted versus the
frequency f. The difference between the Earth and
Mars spectra at high frequencies is mainly due to sensor time
constants. The line marked 2/3 represents the ideal slope of the
inertial subrange power law.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
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The ASI/MET science team would like to acknowledge the
enthusiasm, dedication, and hard work of the engineering teams who
built the accelerometer and MET instruments; the Pathfinder spacecraft
engineering team who got them to Mars; and the Pathfinder mission
operations team who made the instrument do what we wanted and got the
data back to Earth. We also thank T. Clancy for supplying unpublished
microwave profiles to the ASI/MET team within days of the original
observations. The research described in this paper was carried out
under contract with NASA.
23 September 1997; accepted 10 November 1997
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