A new study has used dunes to interpret wind on Mars and focused on what happens when two dunes collide.
The findings of the study were published in the journal 'Geology'.
Dunes develop when wind-blown sand organises into patterns, most often in deserts and arid or semi-arid parts of the world. Every continent on Earth has dune fields, but dunes and dune-like sand patterns are also found across the solar system: on Mars, Venus, Titan, Comet 67P, and Pluto. On Earth, weather stations measure the wind speed and direction, allowing us to predict and understand airflow in the atmosphere.
On other planets and planetary bodies, we do not yet have weather stations measuring the winds (with a few recent exceptions on Mars only). Without a way to directly measure the wind on the surface of another planet, we can use the patterns in dunes to interpret what the wind must be doing, based on our knowledge of dunes on Earth. Furthermore, by studying dunes across planets, we can get a better understanding of how wind and sand behave in general.
In this research, Mackenzie Day of the University of California Los Angeles focused on what happens when two dunes collide.
"On Earth, we know that dunes collide, combine, link, and merge all the time. This is what drives changes in dune-field patterns over time. When this happens, the dune-dune interaction leaves behind a particular pattern in the sand, but that pattern is usually covered by actively moving sand and difficult to see without special tools," said Day.
On Mars, many dunes look and behave similar to dunes on Earth, but in addition, Mars hosts patterns of organised sand that are dune-like but have some differences that have yet to be explained by the scientific community. Whether or not these unusual features, sometimes called "transverse aeolian ridges" or "mega ripples" are formed like dunes has been long debated.
"In this work, I show that these unusual wind-blown sand ridges sometimes show on their surfaces the pattern that forms when two dunes combine," Day added.
In the Iapygia region of Mars, transverse aeolian ridges incorporated both light and dark sands, leading to light-dark banding in the upwind side of the ridges. Banding occurring only on one side of the ridges suggests that the banding formed as the ridges migrated. Furthermore, the dune-interaction pattern known from Earth can be seen in some ridges where the banding is truncated and then reconnects, just like two dunes touching and then combining downwind.
The pattern associated with dune interactions only forms when two dunes combine, therefore seeing it in these martian sand ridges demonstrates that these enigmatic features (like those shown in the image attached) behave like dunes on Earth.
"Just like dunes on Earth, transverse aeolian ridges on Mars migrate, combine, and develop complex patterns in response to the wind," Day said.
Transverse aeolian ridges are incredibly common on Mars, and the results of this work allow us to better interpret the wind at the surface of Mars using these dune-like features.
"Overall, this work leverages both knowledge of Mars and knowledge of Earth to understand the other planet and opens the door to improving how we interpret wind across planetary bodies further into the solar system," Day concluded.
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