Authors
Arakel Petrosyan, B Galperin, Søren Ejling Larsen, SR Lewis, Anni Määttänen, PL Read, Nilton Rennó, LPHT Rogberg, Hannu Savijärvi, T Siili, A Spiga, A Toigo, L Vázquez
Publication date
2011/9
Source
Reviews of Geophysics
Volume
49
Issue
3
Description
The planetary boundary layer (PBL) represents the part of the atmosphere that is strongly influenced by the presence of the underlying surface and mediates the key interactions between the atmosphere and the surface. On Mars, this represents the lowest 10 km of the atmosphere during the daytime. This portion of the atmosphere is extremely important, both scientifically and operationally, because it is the region within which surface lander spacecraft must operate and also determines exchanges of heat, momentum, dust, water, and other tracers between surface and subsurface reservoirs and the free atmosphere. To date, this region of the atmosphere has been studied directly, by instrumented lander spacecraft, and from orbital remote sensing, though not to the extent that is necessary to fully constrain its character and behavior. Current data strongly suggest that as for the Earth's PBL, classical Monin‐Obukhov …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Petrosyan, B Galperin, SE Larsen, SR Lewis… - Reviews of Geophysics, 2011