Abstract

Martian planet-encircling dust storms or global dust storms (GDS), resulting from the combined influence of local and regional storms, are uncommon aperiodic phenomena: with an average frequency of approximately one every 3–4 MY, they produce a substantial rise in the atmospheric dust loading that lasts from weeks to months and have a significant impact on the atmospheric properties, energy budget, and global circulation. During the 2018/MY34 global dust storm, initiated at LS = 185° (30–31 May 2018), an intensive atmospheric science campaign was carried out by the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) rover to monitor the environmental parameters at Gale Crater. We contribute to previous studies with independent retrievals to constrain the dust opacity and characterise the aerosol particle properties, including: size, shape and single scattering phase function. An iterative radiative transfer retrieval procedure was implemented to determine the aerosol parameters that best fit the angular distribution of sky radiance at forward and backward scattering regions observed by MSL Navigation Cameras (Navcams) during the 2018/MY34 GDS. The MOPSMAP aerosol database and Double Henyey-Greenstein (DHG) analytical single scattering phase functions were used to model the Martian dust aerosol. Outcomes of this study show a steep rise in dust opacity from pre-storm levels of 1.2 up to τ > 9, correlated to particle size variations from 1 to 4 μm. DHG phase functions are characterised with an average asymmetry parameter of g = 0.60 ± 0.11 during the storm, diverging from values of around 0.71 ± 0.06 for the same period in previous MY. Best fitting simulations to backscatter observations for high-opacity periods were generated by a mixture of spheroids following a log-normal distribution of aspect ratios centred on 2.8 ± 0.9, in contrast to values of 1.8 in post-storm sols, thus pointing to more irregular particle shapes at the peak of the dust storm.

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