Explanation: Why are these sand dunes on <a ref="https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/ma ... /">Mars</a> striped? No one is sure. The featured image shows striped dunes in Kunowsky Crater on Mars, photographed recently with the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiterâs HiRISE Camera. Many Martian dunes are known to be covered unevenly with carbon dioxide (dry ice) frost, creating patterns of light and dark areas. Carbon dioxide doesnât melt, but sublimates, turning directly into a gas. Carbon dioxide is also a greenhouse material even as a solid, so it can trap heat under the ice and sublimate from the bottom up, causing geyser-like eruptions. During Martian spring, these eruptions can cause a pattern of dark defrosting spots, where the darker sand is exposed. The featured image, though, was taken during Martian autumn, when the weather is getting colder â making these stripes particularly puzzling. One hypothesis is that they are caused by cracks in the ice that form from weaker eruptions or thermal stress as part of the day-night cycle, but research continues. Watching these dunes and others through more Martian seasons may give us more clues to solve this mystery.
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 6:21 am
by Ann
It looks otherworldly. And, of course, it is.
Fascinatingly, though, it looks just a tiny little bit "worldly", too. This APOD is a reminder that Mars is the only other planetary body that is the least bit Earth-like, at least when it comes to conditions on the surface.
Ann
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 9:22 am
by Ara
To me it looks like perhaps being the other way round: dark solid rock (with cracks) surfaces in a sea of light colored sand. I wonder if this could be the case.
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 9:42 am
by XgeoX
The APOD kind of gives me the willies; it reminds me of the giant martian sand slugs of my nightmares...
Er c
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 1:07 pm
by grahamcunningham1089@gmail.com
Just a thought. The dark spots are often arranged in curved rows, where the 'curves' cross-cut/overlap and generally have maxima to the top-right of the image. The joined chain of dunes to lower left seem to be joined en echelon, and the 'spot curves' are aligned with this orientation. Conclusion? Maybe the dark spots are in fact coeval with the dunes, reflecting (maybe) a compositional grading resulting from the dune-forming process. Speculative, sure, but a genuinely fun image!
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 2:54 pm
by orin stepanek
To me; the Dunes look like abstract art! I kind of like it!
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 3:11 pm
by Ann
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Ann
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 3:20 pm
by sp0ck
To me, it looks very reminiscent of a dark, granular material being blown against the dunes from the upper right towards the lower left. Many of the ridges and valleys of the dune structures are more bare of the streaks on the right, in particular the end of the limb in the upper right of the photo. There are what may be "collections" of blown material collected at the bases of the dunes. The arcing nature of the lines could be caused be the result of airflow eddies.
Or, it may be that the darker material is an upper layer and has been eroded off to show the lighter material below.
It *is* possible... Bugs has interacted with Martians!
Perhaps they sculpted his likeness on a grand scale?
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 4:36 pm
by johnnydeep
Ara wrote: ↑Wed Jan 06, 2021 9:22 am
To me it looks like perhaps being the other way round: dark solid rock (with cracks) surfaces in a sea of light colored sand. I wonder if this could be the case.
If you are wondering if the the dark amorphous shapes (that are themselves covered by darker stripes) are not really dunes but hard exposed rock, I'd say definitely no. The sharp crests on the thicker dark shapes strongly imply they are wind-formed dunes.
As for what this image looks like to me: a sea of latte, with floating milk chocolate dunes covered by a dusting of coffee bean powder stripes.
Re: APOD: Striped Sand Dunes on Mars (2021 Jan 06)
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2021 10:38 pm
by Jandotto
I have just been watching a David Attenborough TV program - perfect Planet - this episode being on volcanos. The solidifying outflow of the volcano has very similar patterning to those shown on Mars.