2:30 PM - 2:45 PM
[PPS06-14] High resolution mapping of water vapor over the southern high latitude of Mars observed by MEx/OMEGA: Preliminary results
Keywords:Mars, atmosphere, spectroscopy, water
In this study, we analyze the OMEGA spectra in order to better understand the local time variation and unexpected local enhancement of water vapor (“snake” features) by newly comparing water vapor maps with those of surface ices and atmospheric aerosols. We employ a look-up-table method to derive water vapor column abundance from the observed OMEGA spectra at 2,6 µm water band. In this method, a large number of synthetic spectra are calculated in advance for tabulated grid values of physical parameters (such as water vapor column density, surface pressure, atmospheric temperature, observing geometry, aerosols abundances, etc. e.g., see Forget et al., 2007). It allows us to instantaneously obtain the water vapor column abundances from observed spectra by multi-dimensional interpolation of the synthetic spectra in the look-up-table. With this method, we process the OMEGA data taken in Mars Year 27 between Ls = 250 to 274 (southern summer period) at southern high latitudes (60-90S). In addition to the retrievals of water vapor, we investigate maps of surface water ice (with 1,5 µm feature), surface CO2 ice (with 1,429 µm feature), atmospheric dust (with 2,0 µm and 2,7 µm CO2 bands), atmospheric water ice clouds (with 3.4 and 3.52 µm feature), and regolith water (with 3 µm feature).
We confirm that the retrieved column density of water vapor is indeed larger in the later afternoon than early morning as suggested by Melchiorri et al. (2009). In the previous study, it was interpretated as the result of the stronger sublimation of the polar cap in the later afternoon. In contrast, our preliminary results suggest differently. We have tentatively identified very faint features of CO2ice in the spectra taken in the late afternoon. These features are widely present at the southern high latitudes, which is consistent with the recent finding with CRISM (Cartwright et al., 2023). The CO2 ice features are found only in the late afternoon OMEGA spectra (i.e., no features identified in the early morning OMEGA spectra). While, the data taken in the early morning shows higher abundance of dust in the atmosphere. It suggests that atmospheric dust may prevent faint surface CO2 ice detection. As presence of the surface CO2 ice contaminates the retrieval of water vapor, the obtained large abundances of water vapor in the late afternoon may be an artefact related to the faint presence of surface CO2 ice.
We have also identified several other local enhancements of water vapor abundances (“snake” features) in early morning data. We have found such a feature at multiple orbits but over different locations. We will discuss possible origins of these features in the presentation.