Mars is a dusty planet. From tiny dust devils to vast storms that shroud the planet, dust is a constant challenge for research missions. That was especially true for Ingenuity, the rotorcraft that since February 2021 has been exploring Mars alongside NASA's Perseverance rover. Now, researchers at Stevens Institute of Technology, the Space Science Institute, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory have completed the first real-world study of Martian dust dynamics based on Ingenuity's historic first flights on the Red Planet, paving the way for future extraterrestrial rotorcraft missions.
The work, reported in the December 2022 issue of Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, could support NASA's Mars Sample Return Program, which will retrieve samples collected by Perseverance, or the Dragonfly mission that will set course for Titan, Saturn's largest moon, in 2027.
"There's a reason that helicopter pilots on Earth prefer to land on helipads," said Jason Rabinovitch, a co-author and assistant professor at Stevens. "When a helicopter lands in the desert, its downdraft can stir up enough dust to cause a zero-visibility 'brownout' -- and Mars is effectively one big desert."
Rabinovitch has been working on the Ingenuity program since 2014, joining the Jet Propulsion Laboratory soon after the concept was first pitched to NASA and creating the first theoretical models of helicopter dust lifting in the dusty Martian environments. At Stevens, Rabinovitch continues to work with JPL and investigates plume-surface interactions during powered descent of a spacecraft. He also models supersonic parachute inflation and geophysical phenomena, such as plumes on Enceladus.
Studying dust dynamics on another planet isn't easy, explained Rabinovitch. "Space is a data-poor environment. It's hard to send videos and images back to Earth, so we have to work with what we can get."
To overcome that challenge, Rabinovitch and colleagues at JPL used advanced image-processing techniques to extract information from six helicopter flights, all low-resolution videos captured by Perseverance. By identifying tiny variations between video frames, and the light intensity of individual pixels, the researchers were able to calculate both the size and the total mass of dust clouds kicked up as Ingenuity took off, hovered, maneuvered, and landed.
The results were within striking distance of Rabinovitch's engineering models -- itself a remarkable achievement, given the limited information available to the team way back in 2014, when Rabinovitch and his colleagues were writing back-of-the-envelope calculations intended to support the original design of Ingenuity.
The research shows that, as predicted, dust is a significant consideration for extra-terrestrial rotorcraft, with Ingenuity estimated to have kicked up about a thousandth of its own mass (four pounds) in dust each time it flew. That's many times more dust than would be generated by an equivalent helicopter on Earth, though Rabinovitch cautions that it's tricky to draw direct comparisons.
"It was exciting to see the Mastcam-Z video from Perseverance, which was taken for engineering reasons, ended up showing Ingenuity lifting so much dust from the surface that it opened a new line of research," said Mark Lemmon, senior research scientist at the Space Science Institute Mars Science Laboratory and first author of the study.
"When you think about dust on Mars, you have to consider not just the lower gravity, but also the effects of air pressure, temperature, air density -- there's a lot we don't yet fully understand," Rabinovich said. Still, he added, that's what makes studying Ingenuity's dust clouds so exciting.
Read more at Science Daily
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