Skip to main content

Check out this incredible cloud atlas of Mars

Arsia Mons Elongated Cloud (AMEC): This elongated cloud has formed as a result of wind encountering the Arsia Mons mountains. It forms almost every day during a specific season, from early morning until noon.
This elongated cloud has formed as a result of wind encountering the Arsia Mons mountains. It forms almost every day during a specific season, from early morning until noon. ESA/DLR/FU Berlin/A. Cowart

Photographing a beautiful sky is a great passion for many here on Earth, but it can be just as striking on another planet too. Researchers recently presented a stunning new “cloud atlas” of Mars: a database containing 20 years’ worth of images of clouds and storms observed on the red planet.

The cloud atlas is available online, inviting you to browse the many images of martian weather captured by the Mars Express spacecraft. This European Space Agency mission has been in orbit around Mars since 2005, and has taken hundreds of images of the planet using its High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) instrument.

Dust lifting event. This image displays two atmospheric phenomena: the white curved lines are gravity wave clouds, while the brown areas are dust lifted from the ground by wind. The colour shift visible in the dust lifting event might be indicative of very fast winds, a phenomenon currently under investigation by other members of the team.
This image displays two atmospheric phenomena: the white curved lines are gravity wave clouds, while the brown areas are dust lifted from the ground by wind. The color shift visible in the dust-lifting event might be indicative of very fast winds, a phenomenon currently under investigation by other members of the team. ESA/DLR/FU Berlin

“Clouds on Mars are just as diverse and fascinating as those we see in our skies on Earth, with some features unique to the Red Planet,” said Daniela Tirsch of the German space agency DLR, who presented the work at the Europlanet Science Congress this week.

Recommended Videos

“One of my favorite phenomena are the beautiful ‘cloud streets’ — linear rows of fleecy clouds that develop around the huge volcanic Tharsis rise and the northern lowlands in northern spring and summer. While they resemble cumulus clouds on Earth, they are formed under different atmospheric conditions. We also see impressive dust clouds that can spread hundreds of kilometers — a phenomena we luckily don’t experience on Earth.”

Cloud Streets at Vastitas Borealis: An example of cloud streets over Vastitas Borealis, a large area near the North Pole mostly devoid of craters.
An example of cloud streets over Vastitas Borealis, a large area near the North Pole mostly devoid of craters. ESA/DLR/FU Berlin/A. Cowart

As well as the cloud streets, the images show phenomena like dust-lifting events, when the combination of high winds and low gravity combine to lift dusty material off the planet’s surface and into the atmosphere. These dust storms can grow very large, even covering the entire planet at times.

Lee waves: Lee waves are a special type of cloud created by the wind encountering obstacles and build up on the ‘leeward‘ or downwind side. The geometries of the lee waves depend on the shape of the obstacles
ESA/DLR/FU Berlin

Other phenomena captured include Lee waves, which are rippled clouds that are created by steep sided formations like ridges and mountains, and which are also seen on Earth.

Lee waves: Lee waves are a special type of cloud created by the wind encountering obstacles and build up on the ‘leeward‘ or downwind side. The geometries of the lee waves depend on the shape of the obstacles.
Lee waves are a special type of cloud created by the wind encountering obstacles and build up on the “leeward,” or downwind, side. The geometries of the lee waves depend on the shape of the obstacles. ESA/DLR/FU Berlin

Studying the clouds on Mars can help reveal information about its atmosphere, weather, and the dusty material called regolith that covers the planet — all of which is important not only for understanding the planet today and its history but also for future aims like landing heavier spacecraft safely on the planet’s surface.

The researchers have used the cloud atlas to create global cloud maps and to study variation between seasons and locations, and they hope to gather more data to add to it in future, Tirsch said. “As Mars Express has been extended by ESA until at least 2026, this will enable us keep filling this database and refine even further our understand of Mars atmosphere.”

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Check out this incredible panorama of Mars taken by Curiosity
NASA’s Curiosity captured this panorama using its Mastcam while heading west away from Gediz Vallis channel on Nov. 2, 2024, the 4,352nd Martian day, or sol, of the mission. The Mars rover’s tracks across the rocky terrain are visible at right.

The Curiosity rover has been on Mars since 2012, and in that time it has driven more than 20 miles -- which might not sound like a lot, but is a long distance for a rover traveling at slow, careful speeds that are somewhat less than the average garden snail. The rover has now reached the end of an area it has been exploring for the past year -- a channel called Gediz Vallis -- but before it moved on, the rover snapped a series of images of the area, which you can explore in this NASA panorama:

Curiosity Rover Leaves Gediz Vallis Channel (360 View)

Read more
Planetary defense mission Hera blasts off toward Mars
Hera will perform a swingby of Mars in March 2025 as a way of gathering extra momentum on its way to the Didymos binary asteroid system. The spacecraft will fly within the orbits of both Martian moons Deimos and Phobos, and perform science observations of the former body and the planet's surface, in synergy with the UAE's Hope orbiter and gathering preparatory data for JAXA-DLR's MMX Martian Moons eXploration mission due to be launched in 2026.

The European Space Agency (ESA)'s planetary defense mission, Hera, has completed the first major maneuver of its journey following its launch in October. The spacecraft has burned its thrusters to put it on a course toward Mars, which it should reach to perform a gravity assist flyby in 2025.

The mission is a follow-up to NASA's DART mission, which deliberately crashed into an asteroid in 2022. DART was testing to see whether impacting a spacecraft into an asteroid could alter its trajectory, which it succeeded in doing. The idea is that if an asteroid should ever threaten Earth, space agencies could send a spacecraft to crash into it and knock it off course.

Read more
Watch NASA’s Mars video of a ‘googly eye’ during solar eclipse
The Perseverance Mars rover took this selfie on Sept. 10, 2021 — sol 198 of the mission – in Jezero Crater after coring into a rock called ‘Rochette.’ Rock core samples from the floor of the crater will be brought back to Earth and analyzed to characterize the planet’s geology and past climate.

As it continues its painstaking search for microbial life on Mars, NASA’s Perseverance rover has also been reporting otherworldly happenings occurring during its adventures.

Just recently, for example, one of its many onboard cameras captured some remarkable footage of a solar eclipse as Phobos -- one of Mars’ two moons -- passed between the red planet and the sun.

Read more