TY - JOUR
T1 - Martian Atmospheric Temperature and Density Profiles During the First Year of NOMAD/TGO Solar Occultation Measurements
AU - the NOMAD team
AU - López-Valverde, Miguel Angel
AU - Funke, Bernd
AU - Brines, Adrian
AU - Stolzenbach, Aurèlien
AU - Modak, Ashimananda
AU - Hill, Brittany
AU - González-Galindo, Francisco
AU - Thomas, Ian
AU - Trompet, Loic
AU - Aoki, Shohei
AU - Villanueva, Gerónimo
AU - Liuzzi, Giuliano
AU - Erwin, Justin
AU - Grabowski, Udo
AU - Forget, Francois
AU - López-Moreno, José Juan
AU - Rodriguez-Gómez, Julio
AU - Ristic, Bojan
AU - Daerden, Frank
AU - Bellucci, Giancarlo
AU - Patel, Manish
AU - Vandaele, Ann Carine
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors. This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
PY - 2023/2/1
Y1 - 2023/2/1
N2 - We present vertical profiles of temperature and density from solar occultation (SO) observations by the “Nadir and Occultation for Mars Discovery” (NOMAD) spectrometer on board the Trace Gas Orbiter during its first operational year, which covered the second half of Mars Year 34. We used calibrated transmittance spectra in 380 scans, and apply an in-house pre-processing to clean data systematics. Temperature and CO2 profiles up to about 90 km, with consistent hydrostatic adjustment, are obtained, after adapting an Earth-tested retrieval scheme to Mars conditions. Both pre-processing and retrieval are discussed to illustrate their performance and robustness. Our results reveal the large impact of the MY34 Global Dust Storm (GDS), which warmed the atmosphere at all altitudes. The large GDS aerosols opacity limited the sounding of tropospheric layers. The retrieved temperatures agree well with global climate models (GCM) at tropospheric altitudes, but NOMAD mesospheric temperatures are wavier and globally colder by 10 K in the perihelion season, particularly during the GDS and its decay phase. We observe a warm layer around 80 km during the Southern Spring, especially in the Northern Hemisphere morning terminator, associated to large thermal tides, significantly stronger than in the GCM. Cold mesospheric pockets, close to CO2 condensation temperatures, are more frequently observed than in the GCM. NOMAD CO2 densities show oscillations upon a seasonal trend that track well the latitudinal variations expected. Results uncertainties and suggestions to improve future data re-analysis are briefly discussed.
AB - We present vertical profiles of temperature and density from solar occultation (SO) observations by the “Nadir and Occultation for Mars Discovery” (NOMAD) spectrometer on board the Trace Gas Orbiter during its first operational year, which covered the second half of Mars Year 34. We used calibrated transmittance spectra in 380 scans, and apply an in-house pre-processing to clean data systematics. Temperature and CO2 profiles up to about 90 km, with consistent hydrostatic adjustment, are obtained, after adapting an Earth-tested retrieval scheme to Mars conditions. Both pre-processing and retrieval are discussed to illustrate their performance and robustness. Our results reveal the large impact of the MY34 Global Dust Storm (GDS), which warmed the atmosphere at all altitudes. The large GDS aerosols opacity limited the sounding of tropospheric layers. The retrieved temperatures agree well with global climate models (GCM) at tropospheric altitudes, but NOMAD mesospheric temperatures are wavier and globally colder by 10 K in the perihelion season, particularly during the GDS and its decay phase. We observe a warm layer around 80 km during the Southern Spring, especially in the Northern Hemisphere morning terminator, associated to large thermal tides, significantly stronger than in the GCM. Cold mesospheric pockets, close to CO2 condensation temperatures, are more frequently observed than in the GCM. NOMAD CO2 densities show oscillations upon a seasonal trend that track well the latitudinal variations expected. Results uncertainties and suggestions to improve future data re-analysis are briefly discussed.
KW - ExoMars/TGO
KW - Mars
KW - NOMAD
KW - atmospheric structure
KW - planetary atmospheres
KW - remote sounding
U2 - 10.1029/2022JE007278
DO - 10.1029/2022JE007278
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85148767089
SN - 2169-9097
VL - 128
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets
IS - 2
M1 - e2022JE007278
ER -