Profiling Near-Surface Winds on Mars Using Attitude Data from Mars 2020 Ingenuity
Brian Jackson, Lori Fenton, Travis Brown, Asier Munguira, German, Martinez, Claire Newman, Daniel Vi\'udez-Moreiras, Matthew Golombek, Ralph, Lorenz, Mark D. Paton, and Dylan Conway

TL;DR
This study uses data from the Mars 2020 Ingenuity helicopter to estimate near-surface winds at various altitudes on Mars, revealing higher-than-expected wind speeds and complex wind behaviors not fully captured by existing models.
Contribution
First application of helicopter attitude data to directly measure Mars near-surface winds at multiple altitudes, highlighting discrepancies with meteorological models and suggesting transient phenomena influence wind conditions.
Findings
Inferred wind directions match MEDA data when available
Inferred wind speeds often exceed model predictions
Winds show variability indicating transient atmospheric phenomena
Abstract
We used attitude data from the Mars Ingenuity helicopter with a simple steady-state model to estimate windspeeds and directions at altitudes of 3 meters up to 24 meters, the first time winds at such altitudes have been probed on Mars. We compared our estimates to concurrent wind data at 1.5 m height from the meteorology package MEDA onboard the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover and to predictions from meteorological models. Wind directions inferred from the Ingenuity data agreed to within uncertainties with the directions measured by MEDA, when the latter were available, but deviated from model-predicted directions by as much as 180 deg in some cases. Also, the inferred windspeeds are often much higher than expected. For example, meteorological predictions tailored to the time and location of Ingenuity's 59th flight suggest Ingenuity should not have seen windspeeds above about 15 m/s, but we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlanetary Science and Exploration · Spaceflight effects on biology · Space Exploration and Technology
