NASA’s PersEVA has witnessed the integration of two dust storms on Mars.
According to RCO News Agency, NASA’s endurance rover hunted a giant dusty devil swallowing a smaller storm on the edge of Jezero.
According to Space, the Martian dust demons are columns of hot air that collect dust and waste when moving to the surface of the planet.
Endurance photographed two integrated storms on January 6, while exploring the western margin of Jisro Mars, in a place called Witch Hazel Hill.
Mark Lemmon, a scientist at the Institute of Space Sciences in Boulder, Colorado, in a statement by NASA, sharing a video of the integration of storms, said: Convergence vortexs can be evil with dusty nicknames.
“These small tornadoes are wandering on the surface of Mars, collecting the dust as they move and reduce vision in their near areas,” Lemon added. If the two dust devils merge, they can destroy each other or integrate each other, and the stronger tornadoes swallow the weaker tornado.
Endurance, using one of its navigation cameras, captured images of the Red Planet’s storms. The rover was about 1.5 miles (one kilometer) from two integrated storms, 2 feet (five meters) and 2 feet (2 meters), respectively.
“Dusty demons play an important role in Mars climate patterns,” said Katie Stack Morgan, scientist of the NASA Jet Jet Laboratory in southern California. The study of the devil is important, because these phenomena show atmospheric conditions such as the direction and speed of the dominant wind and are responsible for about half of the dust on the Mars atmosphere.
In addition to the integration of two dust storms recorded in the background of the video, two other dusts are seen on the left and center of the background, indicating how common these storms are on Mars.
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(tagstotranslate) Mars Endurance (T) Dust (T) Mars
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