NASA's Juno spacecraft has detected interplanetary particles that suggest Martian storms fill the solar system with dust, causing a strange haze known as zodiacal light to be seen from Earth.
"We thought, 'Something is really wrong,'" John Leif Jørgensen, lead author of the study and a professor at the Technical University of Denmark, said in the statement. "The images looked like someone was shaking a dusty tablecloth out their window."
"Even though we're talking about objects with only a tiny bit of mass, they pack a mean punch," Jack Connerney, co-author of the study and Juno's deputy principal investigator, said in the statement. "Each piece of debris we tracked records the impact of an interplanetary dust particle, allowing us to compile a distribution of dust along Juno's path."
The researchers estimate the thick disk of dust extends from Earth — whose gravity sucks up particles that get near it — to just beyond Mars, where the influence of Jupiter's gravity acts as a barrier, preventing dust particles from traveling any further into deep space. Known as orbital resonance, this phenomenon also blocks dust originating in deep space from entering the inner solar system, which helps narrow down the source of the dust cloud that causes the zodiacal light.
In addition, the influence of Jupiter's gravity barrier also indicates that the dust particles are in a nearly circular orbit around the sun. Therefore, researchers believe the Red Planet is a source of the interplanetary dust, given Mars — the dustiest planet we know of — also has an almost circular orbit and lies within the dusty disk, according to the statement.
Using computer models, the researchers mapped the distribution of the dust cloud to simulate how light is reflected by the interplanetary particles. When factoring in the orbital elements of Mars, the models predicted the same pattern of zodiacal light seen from Earth.
While these models helped identify the origin of the dust particles, as well as how the particles orbit in our solar system, further research is needed to understand how dust escapes Mars' gravity, the authors said. However, mapping the distribution and density of this interplanetary dust will help protect future spacecraft missions, according to the statement.
Their findings were published March 9 in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.