Abstract

We performed retrievals of dust and water–ice optical depths at select times spanning Mars years (MYs) 33 through 36. We used data taken by the Imaging Ultraviolet Spectrograph (IUVS) instrument aboard the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) spacecraft, whose precessing orbit allowed IUVS to image the diurnal evolution of water–ice clouds at local times throughout this MY range where they have not been studied. We created a radiative-transfer retrieval algorithm and used it to simultaneously fit the dust and water–ice optical depth of each usable spectrum in IUVS apoapse data for the majority of the MAVEN mission. We compared our results to other datasets to ensure our retrievals produced plausible values and discuss potential reasons for discrepancies. We obtained global climate model (GCM) simulations from two state-of-the-art models and compared our results to both sets of simulations. We show that there are significant differences between our water–ice retrievals and both sets of simulations, both in the spatial cloud patterns and column-integrated optical depths. We discuss the different approaches both models used for simulating these clouds and the implications for accurately modeling these clouds in future GCM work.

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