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Validating Mars GCMs Using High Resolution Ground Observations

Presentation #506.02 in the session “Mars Atmospheric Dynamics”.

Published onOct 26, 2020
Validating Mars GCMs Using High Resolution Ground Observations

Validation of Global Climate Models (GCMs) for planets in our solar system requires observational data, but observations from the orbit of Mars and its surface are limited in number and are constrained by their orbit or landing site. Ground-based observations of Mars can help by providing data across the entire Martian hemisphere, yet historically, ground-based observations at submillimeter wavelengths have been limited to disk-average, or at best, a few resolution elements across Mars. We used Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of Mars to determine the spatial distribution of carbon monoxide in the Martian atmosphere, which can be related to the atmospheric temperature. ALMA’s comparably high spatial and spectral resolutions in the submillimeter wavelengths could allow the mapping of abundances and temperature profiles, and the comparison of these data to simulations generated by the Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique (LMD) Mars GCM. However, the long baselines associated with the high spatial resolution of ALMA introduced systematic errors that resulted in radiative transfer modeling degeneracies. This work serves to provide insight to facilitate proposed ALMA observations of Mars in the future, so that the systematic errors encountered within these observations might be avoided.

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