IAA authors:
López-Valverde, M. A.;Brines, A.;Lopez-Moreno, J. J.
Authors:
Trompet, L.;Vandaele, A. C.;Thomas, I.;Aoki, S.;Daerden, F.;Erwin, J.;Flimon, Z.;Mahieux, A.;Neary, L.;Robert, S.;Villanueva, G.;Liuzzi, G.;López-Valverde, M. A.;Brines, A.;Bellucci, G.;Lopez-Moreno, J. J.;Patel, M. R.
Journal:
Journal of Geophysical Research (Planets)
Abstract:
The Solar Occultation (SO) channel of the Nadir and Occultation for Mars Discovery (NOMAD) instrument scans the Martian atmosphere since 21 April 2018. In this work, we present a subset of the NOMAD SO data measured at the mesosphere. We focused on a spectral range that started to be recorded in Martian year (MY) 35. A total of 968 vertical profiles of carbon dioxide density and temperature covering MY 35 and the beginning of MY 36 were investigated until 135° of solar longitude. We compared 47 profiles with co-located profiles of the Mars Climate Sounder onboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Most profiles show a good agreement as SO temperatures are only 1.8 K higher, but some biases lead to an average absolute difference of 7.4°K. The SO data set is also compared with simulations from the Global Environmental Multiscale-Mars general circulation model. Both data sets are in good agreement except for the presence of a cold layer in the winter hemisphere and a warm layer at dawn in the Northern hemisphere for solar longitudes between 240° and 360°. Five profiles contain temperatures lower than the limit for CO<SUB>2</SUB> condensation. Strong warm layers were found in 13.5% of the profiles. They are present mainly at dawn and in the winter hemisphere, while the Northern dusks appear featureless. The data set mainly covers high latitudes around 60° and we derived some non-migrating tides. In the Southern winter hemisphere, we derived apparent zonal wavenumber-1 (WN-1) and WN-3 tidal components with a maximum amplitude of 10% and 5% at 63 km, respectively.
URL:
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2023JGRE..12807279T/abstract