Constraints on Mars Aphelion Cloud Belt Phase Function and Ice Crystal Geometries
Brittney A. Cooper, John E. Moores, Douglas J. Ellison, Jacob L., Kloos, Christina L. Smith, Scott D. Guzewich, Charissa L. Campbell

TL;DR
This study constrains the phase function and ice crystal geometries of Martian water ice clouds using new observations from the Mars Science Laboratory, improving climate models by identifying likely ice crystal shapes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel all-sky observation method to determine the phase function of Martian ice clouds and identifies the most probable ice crystal geometries during the Aphelion Cloud Belt season.
Findings
Aggregates and hexagonal solid columns are the most probable ice crystal shapes.
Droxtals and spheres are less likely components of Martian WICs.
The phase function data improves the accuracy of Martian climate models.
Abstract
This study constrains the lower bound of the scattering phase function of Martian water ice clouds (WICs) through the implementation of a new observation aboard the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL). The Phase Function Sky Survey (PFSS) was a multiple pointing all-sky observation taken with the navigation cameras (Navcam) aboard MSL. The PFSS was executed 35 times during the Aphelion Cloud Belt (ACB) season of Mars Year 34 over a solar longitude range of L_s=61.4{\deg}-156.5{\deg}. Twenty observations occurred in the morning hours between 06:00 and 09:30 LTST, and 15 runs occurred in the evening hours between 14:30 and 18:00 LTST, with an operationally required 2.5 hour gap on either side of local noon due the sun being located near zenith. The resultant WIC phase function was derived over an observed scattering angle range of 18.3{\deg} to 152.61{\deg}, normalized, and compared with 9…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Spaceflight effects on biology · Space Exploration and Technology
