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![]() by Staff Writers Berlin, Germany (SPX) Apr 04, 2022
Mars has a very thin atmosphere, which at the surface has a density approximately one percent that of Earth's. Until recently, it was unclear whether there is anything to hear in the barren landscape there and if it is even possible for sound to be recorded under these conditions. When NASA's Perseverance Mars rover landed on the Red Planet on 18 February 2021, it was carrying two microphones. A new study that has been published in the scientific journal Nature reveals that the speed of sound on Mars is slower than that on Earth. The study was conducted using sound recordings from the rover. A deep silence prevails, interrupted only by the hum and click of the rover's mechanical systems in the light Martian wind, the whir of the Martian helicopter's rotors or the noise of the plasma produced by the SuperCam laser during analysis of the Martian surface. The German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR) is involved in the investigation of this plasma noise. "Using the Schlieren method, we were able to visualise the sound waves of the plasma plumes, that are created during laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) in the laboratory under Mars-analogue conditions. We are particularly interested in how the acoustic signal is generated along with the microplasma," reports Susanne Schroder from the DLR Institute of Optical Sensor Systems in Berlin. SuperCam can vaporise rock material from distances of several metres and study the resulting plasma. These produce a high-pitched noise above two kilohertz. "The LIBS measurements are made at different distances from the rover, so the noise produced by the plasma is a good source for studying the speed of sound. It showed that on the Red Planet there are two different sound velocities, for frequencies above and below 240 hertz. The sound is also strongly attenuated, so that barely any sound can be heard after a few metres," Schroder explains.
After eight metres, (almost) silence Another effect of the thin atmosphere is that sounds are only transmitted over a short distance, and high-pitched sounds hardly propagate at all. On Earth, sound can drop off after about 65 metres, but on Mars this occurs after only eight metres, with high-pitched sounds completely lost at this distance. Nevertheless, the microphone team managed to detect the low-pitched whirring sound of the Martian helicopter Ingenuity even at a distance of 80 metres. Most of the sounds in the Nature study were recorded with the SuperCam microphone, which is attached to the head of the rover's mast. The first audio recordings from Mars included various natural sounds as well as sounds generated by the rover itself. In addition to sounds from the SuperCam instrument's LIBS, the microphone was able to pick up mechanical sounds from Perseverance and Ingenuity. The helicopter's rotor blades spin at 2500 revolutions per minute and produce a distinctive, low-pitched sound at 84 hertz. In addition, the researchers listened to the wind and turbulence. In total, four hours and 40 minutes of Martian sounds were analysed in a frequency range from 20 hertz to 50 kilohertz.
Louder sounds in autumn Studying the sounds recorded by the rover's microphones not only provides information about the Martian atmosphere, but also helps scientists assess the condition and operation of the rover's many systems, just as you might be able to check the health of your car by the sound that it makes. Some of NASA's missions that preceded Perseverance attempted to record sounds on the Red Planet, but failed. The Mars Polar Lander carried a microphone, but the spacecraft was lost after entering the Martian atmosphere; the microphone on the Phoenix lander experienced technical problems. + In situ recording of Mars soundscape
![]() ![]() Mars' thin atmosphere means quieter sounds, new data shows Washington DC (UPI) Apr 1, 2021 Data from NASA's Perseverance Rover has given scientists their first clear picture of how sound travels on Mars' surface. The Red Planet's thin, cold atmosphere, made of mostly carbon dioxide, causes sound to move slower and carry for shorter distances compared to those on Earth. An international team of scientists led by Sylvestre Maurice, an astrophysicist at the University of Toulouse in France, published the findings Friday in the journal Nature. The team studied recordings from the ... read more
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