Yikes, Ike!

This is WAY Bigger than a Martian Dust Devil

As everybody on the planet probably knows (or will know soon enough) Hurricane Ike is making landfall on the Texas coast, sending huge storm surge-driven waves up over the Galveston sea wall and causing damage.  If you have Google Earth, you can activate a weather layer and watch (almost hypnotized) as the storm zeros in on the coast.  If you happen to be on the International Space Station, here’s the view of the storm on September 10, 2008.  At that time, the center of the storm was at coordinates 23.8 degrees north latitude and 85.3 degrees west longitude, moving at seven nautical miles per hour.  It’s now over Galveston and doing its worst.  I hope that all who are in the area have been able to find safety, and can ride the storm out.

Hurricane Ike from ISS on September 10.
Hurricane Ike from ISS on September 10. You can see more images at: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/multimedia/hurr_ike091008.html

Reap the Martian Whirlwinds

NASA Phoenix Lander Sees Dust Devils

Phoenix Lander catches sight of a dust devil near its landing site. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Texas A&M University)

The Phoenix Lander that’s currently checking out the conditions near Mars’s north pole caught some dust devil action a few days ago, and sent back some images to prove it. Dust devils are these little whirlwinds that occur when the Sun heats a planetary surface like Mars or Earth. If conditions are right (i.e. dry, dusty), the surface radiates the heat back up to the atmosphere, and that causes currents in the air. If there’s enough of it, the currents whirl around, creating dust devils.  I’ve seen them in the American Southwest and in movies shot in the Australian Outback.

These dust devils were quite a surprise to the Phoenix scientists, although they were hoping and expecting to see some. At least six different dust devils appear in a series of 12 images and they range in size from about two meters to five meters across. The Phoenix team is not worried about any damage to the spacecraft from these swirling winds. “With the thin atmosphere on Mars, the wind loads we might experience from dust devil winds are well within the design of the vehicle,” said Ed Sedivy, Phoenix program manager at Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, Denver, which made the spacecraft. “The lander is very rigid with the exception of the solar arrays, which once deployed, latched into position and became a tension structure.”