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  • 2 days ago
Learn how NASA’s satellite fleet helps provide weather Information for the missions on the surface of Mars.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

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Transcript
00:00January 2022. A dust storm nearly twice the size of the United States blankets Mars' southern
00:12hemisphere, reducing sunlight and uniting NASA's spacecraft to help one another through the storm.
00:19NASA's Curiosity rover captured these images as the dust rolled in, obscuring the horizon.
00:25Also in the storm's path was NASA's InSight lander, which had to stop its science work after dust
00:32prevented sunlight from reaching the solar panels. InSight hunkered down for 11 days to conserve
00:38battery power, but didn't weather the storm alone. A fleet of NASA orbiters monitor dust storms from
00:45above and serves as a lifeline to Earth, relaying data from Mars' explorers back to the team. Dust
00:53storms like this recent one start close to the ground and are spread by wind as they rise,
00:59warming the cold Martian atmosphere. Storms are first detected by MRO's Mars Color Imager,
01:05or MARSI, which produces a daily global weather map. As dust rises in the atmosphere, MRO's Mars
01:13Climate Sounder instrument measures temperature to determine how fast the storm could spread.
01:18MAVEN studies the upper atmosphere, including how dust affects the escape of water and other gases from
01:25the atmosphere. And for 20 years, Odyssey's Thermal Emission Imaging System, or THEMIS, has helped measure
01:33global dust activity over time. The orbiter sends most of InSight's data to Earth, but as Odyssey went to
01:41check in on InSight, it experienced a software issue. The Odyssey team swung into action, recovering quickly
01:48so engineers could send new instructions to InSight. The dust even grounded NASA's Ingenuity Mars helicopter,
01:57postponing flights until conditions improved. Dust storms formed during all Martian seasons. Some can
02:03balloon in a matter of days, like the 2018 global dust storm, which led to the end of NASA's Opportunity
02:11rover. Despite the challenges dust creates for spacecraft, studying storms is critical for creating future
02:17weather forecasts and preparing for a potential human mission to Mars. To get the latest updates, follow
02:25at NASA JPL and at NASA Mars on social media, or take a deeper dive on the mission websites at mars.nasa.gov.

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