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A towering dust storm that engulfed the Mars Perseverance rover in September 2021 was a colossal 390.4 feet (119 meters) tall, the first-ever audio recording of a dust devil on the surface of Mars reveals.
The recording, an analysis of which was published Tuesday (Dec. 13) in the journal Nature Communications(opens in new tab), also reveals brand-new information about how these short-lived phenomena move dust around on the Red Planet.
"We can actually hear the noise of particles impacting the rover," study lead author Naomi Murdoch, a physicist at the National Higher French Institute of Aeronautics and Space (ISAE-SUPAERO) at the University of Toulouse in France, told Live Science. "The sound of these impacts allows us to count how many particles were in the vortex."
These are images taken of the direct dust devil encounter by the the rover’s Navigation Camera (Navcam). The images have been processed to show the quantity of dust. The colour scale ranges from lowest dust content (blue) to highest dust content (yellow).
www.livescience.com...
This made me think of that scene toward the beginning of Mission To Mars (2000) when they were investigating the martian surface and a vortex appeared (that did not end well for the astronauts).