Updated
at 1:40 p.m. ET
A major
dust storm has developed on the red planet, blocking sunlight and prompting
Mars mission managers to keep a close eye on it, SPACE.com has learned.
It is not
known how large the storm might grow, but already it is thousands of miles
across. If it balloons, as dust storms have done in the past,
it could hamper operations of NASA's Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity.
For now,
officials don't think the storm will threaten rover operations, however. In
fact, the windy conditions on the planet have blown off large amounts of dust
from the rovers' solar arrays, giving them more
power. The power boost may lend a helping hand to the Opportunity rover,
should officials decide to send it into Victoria Crater.
"We've been
watching this storm for about six days now," said Steven Squyres of Cornell University, who is the lead scientist of the Mars Exploration Rover Project. "It's
not unheard of for Martian dust storms to cover half the planet, and this one
is now a regional storm."
Squyres
wasn't certain of the storm's exact size, but said it appears to be thousands
of miles in diameter and "ain't no little hurricane." In fact, "it's one of the
most sunlight-blocking
storms we've seen on Mars," he said.
According
to reports from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which Squyres deemed as Mars'
weather satellite, the storm has grown in size and is lifting up dust about 560
miles (900 KM) east of Opportunity, which is presently at Meridiani Planum.
"The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter team is watching this closely, because we
worry about dust in the atmosphere obscuring the sunlight," Squyres said.
Experienced
amateur astronomers have spotted the storm with large telescopes. Paul Maxson
of Phoenix, Arizona, was one of the first to image
the storm.
Dust storms
on Mars occur regularly, but seldom do they grow beyond regional proportions. A
storm in 2001, however, engulfed
the entire planet in red dust.
"If the
storm continues to get worse, it could cut into our activities," Squyres said.
One of those activities, should the team decide it's not too risky, could be
the descent of Opportunity into the massive Victoria Crater. A press conference
is planned for Thursday to discuss the decision.
"The upshot
of all this wind is that the arrays are so clean that the dust is insignificant
right now," he said. "But this is Mars, and we can't predict the weather—we can
only to react to it."
Diana
Blaney, the deputy project manager for the Mars exploration rovers at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, said dust levels can significantly
impact the rovers' missions. "When big dust storms like this come along,
they decrease the energy the rovers can work with," Blaney said.
JPL
spokesperson Guy Webster said Mars mission managers will be monitoring the
storm's progress and how it may affect the planned descent into the crater.
"They've really been paying attention to the storm and been getting regular
reports of its progress," Webster said.