Dust devils - swirling, tornado-like wind phenomena that commonly occur across the world's deserts - are no stranger to the surface of Mars. First detected by a NASA Mars Pathfinder lander in 1997, these twisting columns are plentiful on the Red Planet. But research led by Naomi Murdoch of Toulouse University, France, has revealed what they sound like.
The Perseverance rover - the first spacecraft to carry a microphone to another planet - has recorded the sound of a 100-meter tall, dust grain-infused funnel just as it was skimming above it. Perseverance was built by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and designed to explore the Jezero crater on Mars in the framework of NASA's Mars 2020 mission. It was launched on 30 July 2020.
The rover has a masthead camera - SuperCam - that includes a microphone, and this enabled it to record the sound of the wind rising and falling as the vortex skittered by.
The reason dust devils were detected but not “heard” previously is because the rover’s microphone is only turned on for a few seconds approximately twice a week, revealed the study. Luckily, one such moment finally caught the sound on 27 September 2021.
This Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) image released 26 August, 2003 shows a dust devil (lower-L) and its shadow in the Phlegra region of Mars.
© AFP 2023 / NASA
“If you were standing there, you might be able to see the dust coming towards you, but you probably wouldn’t feel very much or hear anything because of the thin atmosphere. Sound doesn’t travel very well on Mars, which is how we know these grains were hitting very close to the microphone,” Naomi Murdoch told media.
A firefighter walks with a hose as a dust devil kicks up along a charred hillside in the Santa Cruz Mountains near Morgan Hill, California on September 27, 2016.
© JOSH EDELSON
Mars, which still bears visible traces of long-gone rivers and lakes, is now a barren, dusty landscape. The erosive power of dust devils had been a concern ever since they were detected as, unlike terrestrial ones, the Martian whirlwinds are much larger, often towering up to 8km. These funnels are formed when the ground becomes hotter than the air above it. Plumes of hot air rise through cooler denser air, and as they do so, suck in other warm air along the ground. The warm air begins spinning while moving forward, and picks up grains of dust along the way. One previous study discovered that a dust devil on Mars could move at a speed of 46m/s.
Such whirlwinds could cause damage to equipment and are notorious for having destroyed NASA's Opportunity rover in February 2019.
Murdoch explained that one of the major problems that scientists have faced when modelling the Martian climate has been attempting to predict phenomenon like "global dust storms."
“One of the reasons we can’t model this correctly is because we don’t fully understand when, why and how dust is lifted into the atmosphere,” said the scientist, as further research will hopefully provide more answers to the intriguing phenomenon on the Red Planet.
One can listen to the audio from Perseverance to get a better impression of what those Martian-style dust devils are all about.