Inferring Vortex and Dust Devil Statistics from InSight
Brian Jackson, Justin Crevier, Michelle Szurgot, Ryan Battin,, Cl\'ement Perrin, and S\'ebastien Rodriguez

TL;DR
This study analyzes vortex detections by InSight on Mars to understand boundary layer phenomena and dust devil activity, despite no direct dust devil images, by leveraging meteorological data and surface imagery.
Contribution
It introduces a method to infer dust devil statistics and vortex properties on Mars using InSight's meteorological and imaging data, despite no direct dust devil observations.
Findings
Over 900 vortices detected, no active dust devils imaged.
Estimated vortex wind speeds and encounter distances.
High wind speeds may suppress dust devil formation.
Abstract
The InSight mission has operated on the surface of Mars for nearly two Earth years, returning detections of the first Marsquakes. The lander also deployed a meteorological instrument package and cameras to monitor local surface activity. These instruments have detected boundary layer phenomena, including small-scale vortices. These vortices register as short-lived, negative pressure excursions and closely resemble those that could generate dust devils. Although our analysis shows InSight encountered more than 900 vortices and collected more than 1000 images of the martian surface, no active dust devils were imaged. In spite of the lack of dust devil detections, we can leverage the vortex detections and InSight's daily wind speed measurements to learn about the boundary layer processes that create dust devils. We discuss our analysis of InSight's meteorological data to assess the…
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