Article

Particle lifting at the soil-air interface by atmospheric pressure excursions in dust devils

Details

Citation

Balme M & Hagermann A (2006) Particle lifting at the soil-air interface by atmospheric pressure excursions in dust devils. Geophysical Research Letters, 33 (19). https://doi.org/10.1029/2006GL026819

Abstract
[1] Dust devils, small-scale convective vortices found on Earth and on Mars, can transfer substantial quantities of dust from the ground into the atmosphere. It has been proposed that the low-pressure region found at the center of dust devil vortices provides a lift (the 'ΔP' effect) that 'sucks up' material from the surface. Two simple models are compared to investigate the physics behind the ΔP effect and the relevance of competing processes. The first considers an impenneable bed of particles where lifting is by vertical pressure gradients, the second considers a permeable bed where lifting is by drag forces on the particles as gas is sucked from the bed. Pressure gradient lifting appears to be far more efficient than drag force lifting. We describe conditions that favor lifting by the ΔP effect and make qualitative predictions that might be tested in the laboratory, the field, or through observations from Mars Landers. Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union.

Journal
Geophysical Research Letters: Volume 33, Issue 19

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2006
Publication date online14/10/2006
ISSN0094-8276