Surface pressure response to elevated tidal heating sources - Comparison of earth and Mars

Physics

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Atmospheric Heating, Dust Storms, Earth Surface, Mars Surface, Pressure Oscillations, Tides, Atmospheric Models, Diurnal Variations, Ozone, Stratosphere, Viking Lander 1

Scientific paper

Modern atmospheric tidal theory has shown that the dominance of the terrestrial semidiurnal surface pressure oscillation, relative to its diurnal counterpart, is the result of the elevated heating source generated by solar heating of stratospheric ozone. Observations of the daily surface pressure variation at the Viking Lander 1 site on Mars reveal a similar predominance of the semidiurnal surface pressure oscillation only during the onset of a Martian great dust storm. Application of a classical, analytic tidal model to the Viking Lander 1 data indicates that elevating the effective heat source due to solar heating of airborne dust by a few kilometers during the onset of a Martian great dust storm can account for the observed semidiurnal surface pressure variation.

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