
-
California leads lawsuit over Trump's EV charging funding change
-
Meta blocks access to Muslim news page in India
-
PSG are deserving Champions League finalists, says Luis Enrique
-
Bolsonaro leads rally at site of 2023 Brazil insurrection
-
Mexico City prepares to welcome millions for 2026 World Cup
-
Putin's order for three-day truce with Ukraine enters force
-
Defiant Arteta says Arsenal were best team in Champions League despite painful exit
-
US envoy Witkoff briefs UN Security Council on Gaza, other issues
-
Tens of thousands take part in Istanbul rally for jailed mayor
-
Pakistan warns will 'avenge' deaths from Indian strikes
-
US Fed pauses rate cuts again and warns of inflation, unemployment risks
-
New accuser testifies against Weinstein in New York retrial
-
Merz supports easing EU fiscal rules to boost defence spending
-
PSG finish off Arsenal to reach Champions League final
-
Ex-US police officers acquitted in beating death of Black motorist
-
Curry ruled out for a week in NBA playoff blow to Warriors
-
Global stocks mixed as markets eye weekend US-China trade talks
-
Fear and loathing: Trump film threat shocks Latin America
-
Postecoglou hits back at Wenger over 'crazy' Spurs claim
-
US Fed pauses cuts again and flags inflation, unemployment risks
-
Black smoke: Cardinals fail to elect new pope on first try
-
Web archivists scrambling to save US public data from deletion
-
Google shares plunge after Apple executive's court testimony
-
Perrier ordered to remove water filters
-
PGA of America to give away 3,000 Ryder Cup tickets
-
US safety officials slow operations at Newark airport after outage
-
Brevis blitz dims Kolkata's IPL playoff hopes
-
US Fed pauses rate cuts again, flags higher inflation risk
-
McIlroy moves on after Masters win to defend PGA Truist title
-
Spurs star Maddison ruled out for rest of season
-
OpenAI offers to help countries build AI systems
-
Germany's new govt orders border police to reject most asylum seekers
-
USA hosts Pacific Nations Cup finals with eye to '27 Rugby World Cup
-
Six Bulgarians face long UK jail terms for spying for Russia
-
'Hitman' Sharma: Big-hitting leader of India's cricket dreams
-
Wales fly-half Anscombe signs for French club Bayonne
-
Alphabet's share price plunges on traffic drop testimony
-
Amorim eyes European glory with 'worst' Man Utd team in Premier League history
-
Pink smoke signals in Rome call for women priests
-
Utah's NHL team selects Mammoth as nickname
-
Cardinals locked inside Sistine Chapel as conclave begins
-
South Africa launches reform of derelict municipalities
-
Chinese stocks, dollar rise before trade talks, Fed move
-
Serbian leader Vucic defies EU with Russia visit
-
EU trade chief says accelerating free trade talks with Asia
-
Conference League glory would prove Chelsea are back: Maresca
-
Sheinbaum says Mexico will defend free trade deal with US, Canada
-
UN experts warn of 'annihilation' in Gaza amid Israeli strikes
-
China's Xi lands in Moscow to beef up 'no limits' Putin partnership
-
Finnish fighter jet crashes in Arctic town, pilot ejected

Sound of a dust devil on Mars recorded for first time
The sound of a dust devil on Mars was recorded for the first time as the eye of the whirlwind swept over the top of NASA's Perseverance rover, a new study said Tuesday.
"We hit the jackpot" when the rover's microphone picked up the noise made by the dust devil overhead, the study's lead author Naomi Murdoch told AFP.
The researchers hope the recording will help to better understand the weather and climate on Mars, including how its arid surface and thin atmosphere may once have supported life.
Common across Mars, dust devils are short-lived whirlwinds loaded with dust that form when there is a major difference between ground and air temperatures.
They are a common feature in the Jezero crater, where the Perseverance rover has been operational since February 2021 -- but it had never before managed to record audio of one of them.
By chance on September 27, 2021, a dust devil 118 metres (390 feet) high and 25 metres wide passed directly over the rover.
This time the microphone on the rover's SuperCam -- which previously recorded the first ever audio from the Martian surface -- managed to catch the muffled, whirring sounds of the dust devil.
"We hear the wind associated with the dust devil, the moment it arrives, then nothing because we are in the eye of the vortex," said Murdoch, a planetary researcher at France's ISAE-SUPAERO space research institute, where the SuperCam's microphone was designed.
Then the sound returns "when the microphone passes through the second wall" of the dust devil, she added.
- A dust devil mystery -
The impact of the dust made "tac tac tac" sounds which will let researchers count the number of particles to study the whirlwind's structure and behaviour, she said.
It could also help solve a mystery that has puzzled scientists. On some parts of Mars, "whirlwinds pass by sucking up dust, cleaning the solar panels of rovers along the way," Murdoch said.
But in other areas, the whirlwinds move by without kicking up much dust. "They're just moving air," Murdoch said, adding that "we don't know why".
For example, the solar panels of NASA's InSight lander are "covered in dust" because it is located at a spot where it cannot take advantage of these natural vacuum cleaners, she said.
Understanding why this happens could help scientists build a model of dust devils so they might predict where the whirlwinds might strike next.
It could even shed light on the great dust storms that sweep across the planet, famously depicted in the 2015 science-fiction film "The Martian", starring Matt Damon. However Murdoch noted that the violence of the dust storms shown in the film was "unrealistic".
Sylvestre Maurice, a planetary scientist and co-author of the study published in the journal Nature Communications, said that analysing Martian dust makes it possible to "explore the interactions" between the ground and the extremely thin atmosphere.
The atmosphere was much thicker billions of years ago, which allowed for the presence of life-sustaining liquid water, said Maurice, who also works on the SuperCam.
"You might think that studying the Martian climate today is unrelated to the search for traces of life from billions of years ago," he said.
"But it is all part of a whole, because the history of Mars is one of extreme climate change from a humid, hot planet to a completely arid and cold planet."
D.Schneider--BTB