NASA Mars dust devil rumors share. It seemed how scary the voice of the dust devil on Mars was. The dust devil itself is a term for very strong winds on Mars.
NASA is currently studying the planet Mars. Some time ago they sent an explorer robot to explore the surface of the red planet.
Of the many stray evidence NASA has obtained, this is the most startling. How could it not be, now the Perseverance robot is sending voice recordings from the dust of the devil.
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NASA reveals voice of Mars dust demon
Perseverance is NASA’s space probe tasked with exploring Mars. As an explorer robot, Perseverance performed very well.
Since landing on the moon and completing its mission, the Perseverance robot has repeatedly sent images of the current situation on the planet Mars. However, it looks very different now.
Through their SuperCam instrument, Perseverance managed to record a scary sound. After NASA checked again, the sound was coming from a dust demon.
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Meet the Dust Demon of Mars
Dust devil is actually the name for strong winds like a strong tornado on the surface of Mars. Dust devils, these dust-laden convective eddies occur frequently on the surface of Mars, particularly in the area of Jezero crater.
Jezero Crater itself is the landing site for NASA’s Perseverance rover. The rover robot also has an atmospheric turbulence indicator and is a lifting mechanism for the dust cycle on the planet Mars.
NASA has published a prestigious magazine called “The Sound of a Martian Dust Evil”, which is an open access magazine.
The sound of a Martian dust demon was recorded by Perseverance on September 27, 2021. The navigation camera also captures the encounter.
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Essential for future space exploration
Obviously these observations are very important for scientists to anticipate the impact of the implications of grain on the Martian surface on hardware degradation.
Professor Roger Wiens of Purdue University explains that learning with sound is better than using other instruments.
As for the sound of this dust fiend, it is inaccessible, not even to SuperCam microphone recording. Perseverance’s chance encounter with a dust devil shows the potential for acoustic data to then resolve the structure of fast winds existing in the Martian atmosphere.
Wiens also added that the mic wasn’t always on. Perseverance logs about three minutes a day, and getting a sound recording of the swirls is a stroke of luck.
According to information from NASA, the wind on Mars has several benefits, one of which is to blow up the rover’s solar panels which will help them last longer. Just the lack of wind can make the mission fail.
Just like Earth, areas on Mars also experience different weather conditions. With the sound of the Martian dust devil from Perseverance, scientists can get a real picture of it. (R10/HR-Online)