Supercomputer Simulation of Seasonal Changes in Martian Clouds, Dust and Ice

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This video is a simulation of the climate on Mars spanning one year, from spring through winter in the northern hemisphere. It shows the annual cycle of three important components of the Martian climate: water-ice clouds (gray), dust (yellow) and frozen carbon dioxide on the surface (white). As the north pole’s carbon dioxide ice cap shrinks, its southern counterpart grows large. Carbon dioxide gas makes up 95% of Mars’ atmosphere and a considerable portion of it freezes out onto the surface as the poles reach their coldest point. As fall arrives in the simulation, a dust storm forms at the north pole and soon encircles the entire planet, dying down over the course of the winter.

The simulation was run on the NASA Advanced Supercomputing facility's Pleiades supercomputer using data produced by the Mars Climate Modeling Center, both at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley. The MCMC’s work assists NASA in planning missions to Mars and helps us understand our solar system better by answering questions about how planets evolve and whether conditions on Mars could once have been favorable for life.

Video credit: NASA/Ames Research Center/D. Ellsworth

NASA's Ames Research Center is located in California's Silicon Valley. Follow us on social media to hear about the latest developments in space, science, technology and aeronautics.

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Aí Marcianos fecha a janela, pq vai cair chuva! 🌧️🌧️

danisaints
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Good evening, so, the start of your video is Solar Logitude 0 ? Apologies for asking this, TY for sharing this wonderful animation :)

julese
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Wow! That's super interesting. Is the yellow for dust?

sofieshen
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Wouldn't be hard to grow some trees

human
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If we colonize Mars the global extremist will blame man for destroying Mars. The computer simulation will prove it work on that.

ronusa
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