Mars Rover Captures 1st Sound Of A Dust Devil On The Red Planet

The Martian dust devil sounds quieter than the ones on Earth, since the thin atmosphere makes for more muted sounds and less forceful wind, researchers say.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — What’s a dust devil sound like on Mars? A NASA rover by chance had its microphone on when a whirling tower of red dust passed directly overhead, recording the racket.

It’s about 10 seconds of not only rumbling gusts of up to 25 mph (40 kph), but the pinging of hundreds of dust particles against the rover Perseverance. Scientists released the first-of-its-kind audio Tuesday.

It sounds strikingly similar to dust devils on Earth, although quieter since Mars’ thin atmosphere makes for more muted sounds and less forceful wind, according to the researchers.

The dust devil came and went over Perseverance quickly last year, thus the short length of the audio, said the University of Toulouse’s Naomi Murdoch, lead author of the study appearing in Nature Communications. At the same time, the navigation camera on the parked rover captured images, while its weather-monitoring instrument collected data.

“It was fully caught red-handed by Persy,” said co-author German Martinez of the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston.

Photographed for decades at Mars but never heard until now, dust devils are common at the red planet. This one was in the average range: at least 400 feet (118 meters) tall and 80 feet (25 meters) across, traveling at 16 feet (5 meters) per second.

The microphone picked up 308 dust pings as the dust devil whipped by, said Murdoch, who helped build it.

Given that the rover’s SuperCam microphone is turned on for less than three minutes every few days, Murdoch said it was “definitely luck” that the dust devil appeared when it did on Sept. 27, 2021. She estimates there was just a 1-in-200 chance of capturing dust-devil audio.

Of the 84 minutes collected in its first year, there’s “only one dust devil recording,” she wrote in an email from France.

This same microphone on Perseverance’s mast provided the first sounds from Mars — namely the Martian wind — soon after the rover landed in February 2021. It followed up with audio of the rover driving around and its companion helicopter, little Ingenuity, flying nearby, as well as the crackle of the rover’s rock-zapping lasers, the main reason for the microphone.

These recordings allow scientists to study the Martian wind, atmospheric turbulence and now dust movement as never before, Murdoch said. The results “demonstrate just how valuable acoustic data can be in space exploration.”

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Before You Go

Mars Photos
Spirit(01 of16)
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While driving over the reddish rocks and soils of Mars, the rover's wheels dig below the thindusty layer and reveal darker, brownish soils just below. The circular tracks are "pirouettes"that the rovers occasionally do to align their radio antennas for best possible communications.Spirit rover, Pancam image, mission sol (martian day) 141 (May 26, 2004).From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(02 of16)
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Spirit's last Postcard of the Columbia Hills, taken from the plains of Gusev Crater, before therover climbed up into the hills. Mission sol 149 (June 4, 2004).From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(03 of16)
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A view from high in the Columbia Hills, looking over the rover's right solar panel "wing" anddown into the Tennessee Valley. Just like on Earth, hills and ridges on Mars are windy places.The wind creates sand dunes and scours rocks; sometimes it also cleans the dust off the rover's solar panels! Spirit rover Pancam image, mission sol 582 (August 23, 2005).From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit (04 of16)
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Spirit shot this 360° false color Pancam view, called the "Seminole" panorama, on sols 672-677 (Nov. 23-28, 2005) while descending the southern slopes of Husband Hill.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(05 of16)
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This Spirit Pancam false-color panorama from mission sols 748-751 (February 9-12, 2006) shows what could be finely-layered lithified ash fall deposits along the edge of an ancient, worn-down volcanic cinder cone called Home Plate.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(06 of16)
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This Spirit Pancam sol 788 (April 12, 2006) mosaic shows a dramatic example of whiteish and yellowish salty soils dug up by the rover's wheels in what may once have been a hydrothermal vent near the ancient volcanic feature called Home Plate. From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(07 of16)
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This low-Sun panorama was shot from the Spirit Pancam, looking towards Husband Hill in the late afternoon of mission sol 813 (April 16, 2006). It seemed cooler to display the image in old-school sepia tones rather than plain old black-and-white.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(08 of16)
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In late 2008, Spirit got bogged down in the soft salty soils around an ancient volcanic featurecalled Home Plate. This Pancam sol 1933 (June 10, 2009) false-color mosaic reveals the lovely variety of colors and textures in the soils where the rover is currently still stuck. From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Spirit(09 of16)
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This Spirit Pancam false-color postcard, taken on mission sol 2114 (January 4, 2010) shows a volcanic hill called Von Braun, which could be the rover's next exploration target once the rover emerges from its long winter hibernation.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (10 of16)
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A Postcard from the Opportunity rover's Pancam taken on sols 58 to 60 (March 23-25, 2004) that we called the "Lion King" panorama, because it was acquired from a majestic outlook just outside the rim of 22-meter wide Eagle crater. From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (11 of16)
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Sometimes use the rovers' UV and infrared imaging capability to create "false color" images of martian terrains, like this view of sand dunes at the bottom of Endurance crater. False color photos are scientifically useful, but they are often just as valuable as garish and lovelyartistic renderings that would make Andy Warhol proud... Opportunity rover Pancam image, mission sol 207 (August 23, 2004).From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (12 of16)
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Postcard of the crater created after the Opportunity rover's heat shield was jettisoned during the January 24, 2004 landing. This is the youngest (known) impact crater on Mars. Opportunity Pancam mosaic, mission sol 330 (December 28, 2004).From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (13 of16)
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An Opportunity false-color self-portrait mosaic taken from Erebus crater on mission sols 652-666 (November 23-28, 2005) was computer processed into a vertical projection to simulate looking down on the rover and surrounding outcrop rocks. From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (14 of16)
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Having completed the study of Victoria crater in late 2008, Opportunity is now heading towards an even larger crater called Endeavour. Even using new driving methods like the obstacle-avoidance software shown tested here in this sol 1162 (May 2, 2007) Pancam postcard, the rover won't get to Endeavour until sometime in 2011 or maybe even 2012.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (15 of16)
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The exploration of Victoria crater by Opportunity revealed some of the most dramatic and picturesque landscapes yet encountered by either rover. This Pancam sol 1167 (May 7, 2007) false-color mosaic shows some of the steep, layered cliffs of the promontory called Cape of Good Hope.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University
Opportunity (16 of16)
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Opportunity occasionally encounters iron and nickel meteorites while driving across the plains of Meridiani. This Pancam sol 1961 (July 30, 2009) false-color mosaic shows a close up of one called Block Island, which is about 70 cm (28 in) across.From "Postcards from Mars" by Jim Bell; Photo credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell University