Martian lightning
In a dust storm, scientists find the first direct evidence of electrical discharge on Mars
font_down font_up Text Size
access
Electrical dustLightning has been detected for the first time on Mars, and it may look something like this artist’s illustration. Bits of debris in a dust devil rub against one another and then discharge, causing a faint glow like the one at the bottom of the image.University of Michigan

Scientists say they have seen the first direct evidence of lightning on Mars, in the form of electrical discharges during a Martian dust storm.

The finding has implications for human travel to the Red Planet and for studying possible origins of life on Mars, the authors say in a paper to appear in Geophysical Research Letters.

It has been thought that lightning might be possible on Mars. Bits of dust rubbing against each other in one of the planet’s famous dust devils could charge up the particles the same way that running on a carpet charges up socks. All that charge could then be discharged in a zap, either as lightning or a shock.

But catching Martian lightning in the act was difficult: The lightning bursts were too small to distinguish from the energy emanating from the planet itself. And the dust storms themselves obscured the faint glow that might have been visible from just above the red planet.

To “see” the lightning, researchers from the University of Michigan and colleagues used a new detector that can distinguish microwave radiation emanating from natural objects like dirt and rocks from a burst of lightning. Radiation from natural objects, including Martian rocks, is relatively constant; radiation from lightning displays changes in the distribution of frequencies of light.

Using a 34-meter-diameter radio telescope in the California desert, for about five hours a day for 12 days between May 22 and June 16, 2006, the researchers found no signs of the variable radiation, except during a period of two or three hours. At that time a Martian dust storm was on the side of Mars facing the scientists’ detector. “Every time we moved off Mars the [signal] went away. Then we moved it back and it came back again,” says Christopher Ruf of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, one of the study’s authors.

Lightning as an explanation for the results makes sense, says geophysicist Phil Christensen of Arizona State University in Tempe. “I can’t think of a better explanation,” he says. “They found it to be in a dust storm, and that’s exactly where you’d expect it.”

Lightning on Mars is probably fainter and more diffuse than the lightning commonly observed on Earth, says Nilton Renno, another author of the study. “The atmosphere [on Mars] is much less dense,” he says. Instead of forks of lightning, Martian lightning bursts would cover a wider area and would have a “faint glow” like the light in a neon tube.


Found in: Matter & Energy
Comments 1
  • Dust devils get their charge from grains of sand and dust rubbing together in the whirlwind. When certain pairs of unlike materials rub together, one material gives up some of its electrons (negative charges) to the other material. Such separation of electric charges is called triboelectric charging, the prefix "tribo" (pronounced TRY-bo) meaning "rubbing." Triboelectric charging makes your hair stand on end when you rub a balloon against your head. Dust and sand, like plastic and hair, form a tribolelectric pair. (Dust and sand aren't necessarily made of the same stuff, notes Lemmon, because "dust can be blown in from anywhere.") Smaller dust particles tend to charge negative, taking away electrons from the larger sand grains. For further information, check out: http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/06/20/consumers-wise-budgeting-credit-repair/
    Mya D Mya D
    Jun. 23, 2009 at 6:14am
Post a comment

Please login or register to participate.


Advertisement
Suggested Reading:
seperator
  • Delory, G.T., et al. 2006. Oxidant enhancement in Martian dust devils and storms: Storm electric fields and electron dissociative attachment. Astrobiology 6(June):451-462.
  • Atreya, S.K., et al. 2006. Oxidative enhancement in Martian dust devils and storms: Implications for life and habitability. Astrobiology 6(June:439-450.
Citations & References:
seperator
  • Ruf, C., et al. In press. The emission of non-thermal microwave radiation by a Martian dust storm. Geophysical Research Letters.
Reader Favorites:
seperator
SN on the Web:
seperator