Analysis of data from China’s Zhurong rover reveals more about early Mars weather systems

The Zhurong Mars rover, built and operated by the China National Space Administration (CNSA), has sent back data that suggests that Martian sand dunes were produced by a shift in prevailing winds after the planet’s last ice age.

Zhurong is examining dunes on the Utopian Planitia in Mars’s northern hemisphere, the largest recognised impact basin in the solar system with an estimated diameter of 3,300 km.


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CNSA says the shift in prevailing winds took place about 400,000 years ago, coinciding with the end of the last glacial period on the Red Planet.

The results of the study are published in Nature. It was conducted by researchers from the National Astronomical Observatories (NAOC), Institute of Geology and Geophysics and Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) in collaboration with scientists from Brown University in the US.

Diagram showing sand dunes on mars with waveform to left
The Martian dune formation and Martian climate in the Zhurong rover exploration zone. Credit: NAOC.

They found prevailing winds changed direction nearly 70° from northeast to northwest.

The resulting erosion morphed the crescent-shaped dunes formed during the last glacial period on Mars into dark, longitudinal ridges after the ice age.

“The exploration and research on the climate evolution of Mars has been of great concern for a long time,” says senior author and principal investigator of the study Professor Chunlai Li from NAOC. “Mars is the most similar planet to Earth in the solar system. Understanding Martian climate processes promises to uncover details of the evolution and history of Earth and other planets in our solar system.”

It has long been suggested that the Martian climate has changed over time. But without scientists on the surface to directly measure and sample the local geology, giving a sense of these processes is difficult.

High-resolution orbital cameras and Zhurong’s terrain and multispectral cameras have given Li’s team access to surface composition analysis and meteorological measurement instruments taking data directly from the planet’s surface.

Zhurong landed on Mars in May of 2021. The 240-kilogram robot is analysing a relatively flat region in the southern part of the Utopian Planitia which might be the edge of an ancient ocean or lake. It is obtaining data in the region to help researchers build a picture of Martian environments and weather today and in its ancient past.

The analysis of the data occurred before the rover went into hibernation in May 2022, done to protect it from the harsh northern Martian winter.

Mars rover with chinese flag and lander on rocky surface
Zhurong rover group selfie with the Tianwen-1 lander, taken by the deployable Tianwen-1 Remote Camera. Credit: China News Service via Wikimedia Commons CC BY 3.0.

Unfortunately the rover didn’t wake up in December as scheduled, and CNSA is concerned that the rover became inoperable due to dust build up. There is a chance that active cleaning measures may revive the rover in July.

Nevertheless, the data already produced by Zhurong continues to reveal insights into Martian climate and geology.

In April, CAS researchers published a paper in Science Advances that revealed the first evidence of liquid water on Mars from observations made by the rover.

Scientists in China and internationally are engaged in efforts to understand climatic shifts on Mars over the course of the Amazonian epoch. This geological period on Mars began between 3.55 billion and 1.8 billion years ago and continues to this day.


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“Understanding the Amazonian climate is essential to explain the current Martian landscape, volatile matter reservoirs and atmospheric state, and to relate these current observations and active processes to models of the ancient climate of Mars. Observations of the current climate of Mars can help refine physical models of Martian climate and landscape evolution, and even form new paradigms,” Li explains.

“We will continue to study both Amazonian and present-day climate to promote the knowledge regarding the last two billion years of Martian climate history, including its environment and processes.”

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