Now this is really bad weather – a dust storm that doesn’t just cover an area, or even a hemisphere, but the entire planet. During summer in the Red Planet’s southern hemisphere, when Mars is at its closest point to the Sun, solar heating can drive immense storms that blow up red dust and can obscure the surface for months.
In 1971, when Mariner 9 arrived at Mars, it found the whole planet hidden under a veil of dust, with only the volcano Olympus Mons visible. More recently, the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity would struggle to survive in dust storms as the Sun’s light was blocked and their solar panels covered by a coating of dust.
On Earth, moisture arms swirling storms, but on Mars there is only dust. Normally most of the dust is on the ground, but some is found in the atmosphere, where it scatters sunlight and makes the sky appear pinky-red.
And then, just as quickly, the storm can die down. Perhaps by blocking the sunlight, the surface of Mars grows cooler, allowing some of the dust to begin sinking out of the atmosphere. Not all dust storms swallow the entire planet – some are more localized events. However, were you to be on the surface during a dust storm, other than the sky darkening and a fine coating of dust settling over you, the atmosphere is so thin that you’d barely notice the wind or the scouring dust.