‘Very interesting wiggles’ in data from silent NASA Mars spacecraft lead to unexpected solar wind discovery
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
NASA's silent Mars spacecraft, MAVEN, has revealed a phenomenon in Mars' atmosphere known as the Zwan-Wolf effect, previously only observed around strongly magnetized planets like Earth. The effect helps deflect the solar wind, a constant stream of charged particles from the sun, as it encounters a planet's magnetic environment. Mars, having lost its global magnetic field, was not expected to exhibit this effect, making the discovery surprising. The finding was made by analyzing data collected by MAVEN during a powerful solar storm in December 2023, which temporarily amplified the effect, allowing it to be detected. The discovery introduces new physics and a new way the sun and space weather can change the dynamics in the Martian atmosphere, with implications for understanding space weather's impact on planets without protective magnetic shields.
💡 Why It Matters
- · The discovery sheds light on how space weather interacts with planets lacking strong magnetic fields, such as Venus and Saturn's moon Titan.
- · It also highlights the importance of continued exploration of Mars and its atmosphere, even as the MAVEN spacecraft's status remains uncertain.