Details

AcronymSANDEE
DescriptionSand transport during Aeolian processes in the Negev Desert: Electrical Effects and implications for Mars
Principal Investigator (PI)Yoav Yair
Organisation School of sustainability, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya
Co-InvestigatorsItzhak Katra, Dep. of Geography and Environmental Development, Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev, Israel

Summary

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The BGU portable wind tunnel, (c) SANDEE team

When small airborne dust particles, carried by the wind, collide and rub against other suspended particles or against the surface, they may redistribute charge between them. This leads to the phenomenon of the electrification of mineral dust clouds. The efficiency of the process and the sign of the charge a particle acquires depends on its properties, like e.g. shape or mineralogy. By analogy to these processes on Earth, it is to be expected that sand- and dust storms on Mars are electrically charged to some degree, as well. This would have important implications for lander operations, orbiter-lander communication and future human missions.

The SANDEE experiment aims to address several scientific questions regarding the described phenomenon by simulating sandstorms and measuring their dynamic, mineralogical and electrical characteristics. In the experiment the behaviour of soil samples collected on-site in a BGU boundary layer wind tunnel is to be investigated. In the tunnel, the soil samples will be subjected to various wind speeds comparable with typical winds in the Negev desert.

The team plans for two measurement runs, one at daytime and one at night-time. The aim of the night-time run is to include high-speed imaging of the sand movement inside the wind-tunnel, in an attempt to detect corona discharges and light emission during eolian transport.

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