Abstract

AbstractMars possesses dynamical features called polar vortices: regions of cold, isolated air over the poles circumscribed by powerful westerly jets which can act as barriers to transport to dust, water, and chemical species. The 2018 Global Dust Storm was observed by multiple orbiters and offered a valuable opportunity to study the effects of such a storm on polar dynamics. To this end, we assimilate data from the Mars Climate Sounder and Atmospheric Chemistry Suite into a Mars Global Climate Model. We find that the storm had asymmetrical hemispherical impacts, with the northern vortex remaining relatively robust while the southern vortex was substantially diminished in its intensity. We propose that this asymmetry was due both to the storm’s latitudinal extent, as it extended further south than north, and to its equinoctial timing, occurring as the southern vortex was already decaying. We show that both polar vortices, in particular the northern, were reduced in ellipticity by the storm. There was a well‐correlated reduction in stationary topographic wave activity at high latitudes in both hemispheres. We demonstrate that the characteristic elliptical Martian polar vortex shape is the pattern of the stationary waves, which was suppressed by the shifting of the polar jet away from regions of high mechanical forcing (north) or reduction of polar jet intensity by a reduced meridional temperature gradient (south). These asymmetric effects suggest increased transport into the southern (but not northern) polar region during global dust storms at northern autumn equinox, and more longitudinally symmetric transport around both poles.

Highlights

  • Mars’ winter atmosphere is characterized by a polar vortex of low temperatures around the winter pole, circumscribed by a strong westerly jet (Mitchell et al, 2015; Waugh et al, 2016)

  • Mars possesses dynamical features called polar vortices: regions of cold, isolated air over the poles circumscribed by powerful westerly jets which can act as barriers to transport to dust, water, and chemical species

  • The 2018 Global Dust Storm was observed by multiple orbiters and offered a valuable opportunity to study the effects of such a storm on polar dynamics

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Summary

Introduction

Mars’ winter atmosphere is characterized by a polar vortex of low temperatures around the winter pole, circumscribed by a strong westerly jet (Mitchell et al, 2015; Waugh et al, 2016). These vortices are a key part of the atmospheric circulation and are heavily involved with dust and volatile transport (e.g., Holmes et al, 2017). Planetary polar vortices are a common feature of atmospheres in the Solar System, but Mars’ differs from Earth’s in several important respects. Among the most notable and visible is their peculiar annular structure. On Earth, the potential vorticity (PV) (a way of diagnosing the presence and strength of the polar vortex; see discussion below) of the polar vortices increases monotonically toward the pole; on STREETER ET AL.

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