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The Solsticial Pause on Mars Large-scale planetary waves are diagnosed from an analysis of profiles retrieved from the Thermal Emission Spectrometer aboard the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft during its scientific mapping phase. The analysis is conducted by assimilating thermal profiles and total dust opacity retrievals into a Mars global circulation model. Transient waves are largest throughout the northern hemisphere autumn, winter and spring period and almost absent during the summer. The southern hemisphere exhibits generally weaker transient wave behavior. A striking feature of the low-altitude transient waves in the analysis is that they show a broad subsidiary minimum in amplitude centred on the winter solstice, a period when the thermal contrast between the summer hemisphere and the winter pole is strongest and baroclinic wave activity might be expected to be strong. This behavior, here called the 'solsticial pause,' is present in every year of the analysis. This strong pause is under-represented in many independent model experiments, which tend to produce relatively uniform baroclinic wave activity throughout the winter. This paper documents and diagnoses the transient wave solsticial pause found in the analysis; a companion paper investigates the origin of the phenomenon in a series of model experiments.
Document ID
20170002320
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Lewis, Stephen R.
(Open Univ. Milton Keynes, United Kingdom)
Mulholland, David P.
(Oxford Univ. Oxford, United Kingdom)
Read, Peter L.
(Oxford Univ. Oxford, United Kingdom)
Montabone, Luca
(Oxford Univ. Oxford, United Kingdom)
Wilson, R. John
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Princeton, NJ, United States)
Smith, Michael D.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Date Acquired
March 17, 2017
Publication Date
September 15, 2015
Publication Information
Publication: Icarus
Publisher: Elsevier
Volume: 264
ISSN: 0019-1035
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN40084
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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