It might’ve been on a bleary Wednesday when I first stumbled across that slender, ghostly streak climbing Mars’s horizon. No, it wasn’t spaceship exhaust. It was something weirder. Something that shows up like clockwork every year—and only at dawn.
Arsia Mons’s annual whisper
Every Martian winter, something odd flickers into view above the south pole’s towering Arsia Mons volcano. A thin veil of ice crystals, stretching up to 1 800 km long, drapes itself over the summit, only to vanish by midday for almost three Earth months.
- It materializes every morning at dawn for around 80 Martian days (sols).
- It stretches roughly 1 800 km in length and up to 150 km across.
- It’s made of water ice clustering around dust grains.
These numbers underscore how dramatic the phenomenon is each Martian winter.
What’s really going on?
For decades, astronomers scratched their heads: even when simulations cranked Mars’s dust levels sky-high, they still couldn’t reproduce the plume’s exact shape and timing. It was like trying to predict a dust storm’s path without knowing the wind speed.
Then a fresh look at archival data—stretching back to camera snaps from the 1970s through the 2018 Mars Express mission—finally peeled back the mystery’s layers. Researchers noticed the cloud wasn’t random or volcanic but tied to daily wind patterns.
Every spring (or early summer) in Mars’s southern hemisphere, chilly, moisture-rich air pools at the base of Arsia Mons at dawn. That air then climbs the mountain’s western slope, and as it cools, traces of water condense around microscopic dust particles. Voilà: an orographic cloud is born.
But here’s the kicker: at roughly 45 km altitude, this morning plume doesn’t settle. Instead, it’s whisked westwards at hurricane-like speeds—up to 600 km/h—stretching the cloud into a ribbon before it finally breaks free of the volcano’s grasp.
Why does it matter?
Sure, it’s poetic to picture Mars drawing a breath each sunrise. But these findings nudge us closer to understanding Mars’s hidden weather and water cycles—clues we desperately need if humans ever hope to sip cold water beside that dusty horizon.
Catching a fleeting phenomenon
We only catch glimpses because most orbiters peek at Mars at the wrong hour. Enter Mars Express’s Visual Monitoring Camera: its broad lens and morning flybys are perfectly timed to catch the cloud’s daily 2.5-hour blooming window.
Still, there’s uncertainty. Does this plume always wax and wane with equal drama? Or are we missing subtler flairs? Future missions with flexible scheduling could fill the gaps—and maybe uncover flurries of frost we never imagined.
Next time someone mentions Martian clouds, you’ll know this isn’t smoke—it’s Mars exhaling frost. Intrigued? Drop your wild theories in the comments, join the debate on Instagram, and follow us on Facebook, Pinterest or Instagram for more cosmic curiosities.
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Sources:
- www.scitechdaily.com/new-nasa-image-shows-giant-mars-volcano-surging-through-ice-cloud-belt/
- www.nasa.gov/image-article/a-martian-volcano-in-the-mist/

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