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Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
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Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
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Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity

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Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
Paper

Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity

2024
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Overview
We used attitude data from the Mars Ingenuity helicopter with a simple steady-state model to estimate windspeeds and directions at altitudes of 3 meters up to 24 meters, the first time winds at such altitudes have been probed on Mars. We compared our estimates to concurrent wind data at 1.5 m height from the meteorology package MEDA onboard the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover and to predictions from meteorological models. Wind directions inferred from the Ingenuity data agreed to within uncertainties with the directions measured by MEDA, when the latter were available, but deviated from model-predicted directions by as much as 180 deg in some cases. Also, the inferred windspeeds are often much higher than expected. For example, meteorological predictions tailored to the time and location of Ingenuity's 59th flight suggest Ingenuity should not have seen windspeeds above about 15 m/s, but we inferred speeds reaching nearly 25 m/s. By contrast, the 61st flight was at a similar time and season and showed weaker winds then the 59th flight, suggesting winds shaped by transient phenomena. For flights during which we have MEDA data to compare to, inferred windspeeds imply friction velocities exceeding 1 m/s and roughness lengths of more than 10 cm based on a boundary layer model that incorporates convective instability, which seem implausibly large. These results suggest Ingenuity was probing winds sensitive to aerodynamic conditions hundreds of meters upwind instead of the conditions very near Mars 2020, but they may also reflect a need for updated boundary layer wind models. An improved model for Ingenuity's aerodynamic response that includes the effects of transient winds may also modify our results. In any case, the work here provides a foundation for exploration of planetary boundary layers using drones and suggests important future avenues for research and development.