NASA首次观测到火星上的可见光极光
NASA Observes First Visible-Light Auroras at Mars

原始链接: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasa-observes-first-visible-light-auroras-at-mars/

科学家们首次利用毅力号漫游车在地球表面用可见光观测到了太阳高能粒子(SEP)极光。此前,MAVEN轨道器曾用紫外线观测到SEP极光,它是由太阳的高能粒子与火星大气相互作用产生的。 Knutsen的团队预测了最佳观测条件,并与美国宇航局的月球到火星(M2M)空间天气分析办公室和社区协调建模中心(CCMC)协调,以追踪日冕物质抛射(CME)。M2M办公室在2024年3月15日发布了关于一次重大CME的警报,促使Christina Lee发布了火星空间天气警报。 毅力号成功捕捉到了极光,天空出现近乎均匀的557.7纳米波长的辉光。MAVEN和火星快车的数据证实了在观测期间存在SEP。这项合作努力提供了一种研究火星极光的新方法,并通过增进我们对空间天气对红色星球影响的理解,为未来的载人任务做准备。这种绿色的发射线与地球上的绿色极光相同,表明未来的宇航员很可能能够在火星上看到这种极光。

NASA observed visible-light auroras on Mars, a phenomenon noted in an article on nasa.gov. A user named globie highlighted that chroma noise is also present on other planets, pointing out the color swatches in the article's image, which suggested the presence of a green aurora. Another user, widforss, questioned how particles enter the night side atmosphere to cause auroras, given Mars' lack of a global magnetic field, a feature present on Earth. imoverclocked clarified that Mars does possess localized magnetic fields, remnants of a likely global magnetic field from its past. Sharlin suggested the observation likely occurred soon after sunset. Further comments questioned the comparatively poor image quality, with yieldcrv speculating it could be due to strong electromagnetic interference.

原文

Due to the Red Planet’s lack of a global magnetic field, Mars has different types of auroras than those we have on Earth. One of these is solar energetic particle (SEP) auroras, which NASA’s MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN) mission discovered in 2014. These occur when super-energetic particles from the Sun hit the Martian atmosphere, causing a reaction that makes the atmosphere glow across the whole night sky.

While MAVEN had observed SEP auroras in ultraviolet light from orbit, this phenomenon had never been observed in visible light from the ground. Since SEPs typically occur during solar storms, which increase during solar maximum, Knutsen and her team set their sights on capturing visible images and spectra of SEP aurora from Mars’ surface at the peak of the Sun’s current solar cycle.

Coordinating the Picture-perfect Moment

Through modeling, Knutsen and her team determined the optimal angle for the Perseverance rover’s SuperCam spectrometer and Mastcam-Z camera to successfully observe the SEP aurora in visible light. With this observation strategy in place, it all came down to the timing and understanding of CMEs.

“The trick was to pick a good CME, one that would accelerate and inject many charged particles into Mars’ atmosphere,” said Knutsen.

That is where the teams at NASA’s Moon to Mars (M2M) Space Weather Analysis Office and the Community Coordinated Modeling Center (CCMC), both located at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, came in. The M2M team provides real-time analysis of solar eruptions to the CCMC for initiating simulations of CMEs to determine if they might impact current NASA missions. When the simulations suggest potential impacts, the team sends out an alert.

At the University of California, Berkeley, space physicist Christina Lee received an alert from the M2M office about the March 15, 2024, CME. Lee, a member of the MAVEN mission team who serves as the space weather lead, determined there was a notable solar storm heading toward the Red Planet, which could arrive in a few days. She immediately issued the Mars Space Weather Alert Notification to currently operating Mars missions.

“This allows the science teams of Perseverance and MAVEN to anticipate impacts of interplanetary CMEs and the associated SEPs,” said Lee.

“When we saw the strength of this one,” Knutsen said, “we estimated it could trigger aurora bright enough for our instruments to detect.”

A few days later, the CME impacted Mars, providing a lightshow for the rover to capture, showing the aurora to be nearly uniform across the sky at an emission wavelength of exactly 557.7 nm. To confirm the presence of SEPs during the aurora observation, the team looked to MAVEN’s SEP instrument, which was additionally corroborated by data from ESA’s (European Space Agency) Mars Express mission. Data from both missions confirmed that the rover team had managed to successfully catch a glimpse of the phenomenon in the very narrow time window available.

“This was a fantastic example of cross-mission coordination. We all worked together quickly to facilitate this observation and are thrilled to have finally gotten a sneak peek of what astronauts will be able to see there some day,” said Shannon Curry, MAVEN principal investigator and research scientist at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder).

The Future of Auroras on Mars

By coordinating the Perseverance observations with measurements from MAVEN’s SEP instrument, the teams could help each other determine that the observed 557.7 nm emission came from solar energetic particles. Since this is the same emission line as the green aurora on Earth, it is likely that future Martian astronauts would be able to see this type of aurora.

“Perseverance’s observations of the visible-light aurora confirm a new way to study these phenomena that’s complementary to what we can observe with our Mars orbiters,” said Katie Stack Morgan, acting project scientist for Perseverance at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “A better understanding of auroras and the conditions around Mars that lead to their formation are especially important as we prepare to send human explorers there safely.”

More About Perseverance and MAVEN

The Mars 2020 Perseverance mission is part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program portfolio and NASA’s Moon to Mars exploration approach, which includes Artemis missions to the Moon that will help prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is managed for the agency by Caltech, built and manages operations of the Perseverance rover.

The MAVEN mission, also part of NASA’s Mars Exploration Program portfolio, is led by LASP at CU Boulder. It’s managed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and was built and operated by Lockheed Martin Space, with navigation and network support from NASA’s JPL.

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