Reproducing size distributions of swarms of barchan dunes on Mars and Earth using a mean-field model
Dominic T Robson, Alessia Annibale, Andreas CW Baas

TL;DR
This study uses a mean-field model to reproduce and analyze the size distributions of barchan dune swarms on Mars and Earth, revealing different dominant interaction processes in each region.
Contribution
It introduces the CAFE mean-field model to explain regional differences in dune size distributions and identifies key interaction types influencing these patterns.
Findings
Two attractor states in dune size distributions are identified.
Aggregation and fragmentation dominate in Tarfaya, while exchange interactions are key in Mars and Mauritania.
Spontaneous calving has minimal impact on dune size distributions.
Abstract
We apply a mean-field model of interactions between migrating barchan dunes, the CAFE model, which includes spontaneous calving, aggregation, fragmentation, and mass-exchange, yielding a steady-state size distribution that can be resolved for different choices of interaction parameters. The CAFE model is applied to empirically measured distributions of dune sizes in two barchan swarms in the north circumpolar region of Mars, three swarms in Morocco, and one in Mauritania, each containing more than 1000 bedforms. When the sizes of bedforms are rescaled by the mean size in each zone two attractor states appear, with the Tarfaya zones all displaying a common distribution and the Martian and Mauritanian zones sharing a different distribution. Comparison of these attractor states with the outputs of the CAFE model reveals that the Tarfaya-type distribution results from a preference for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAeolian processes and effects · Planetary Science and Exploration · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
