Researchers showed that the upper atmosphere of Mars glows blue depending on the activity of the Sun.
The result was achieved through numerical simulation and a laboratory experiment, called the Planeterrella, used to simulate the aurora.
The study indicates that the strongest colour in the Martian aurorae is deep blue. Green and red also occur, just like on Earth.
"An astronaut looking up while walking on the red Martian soil would be able, after intense solar eruptions, to see the phenomena with the naked eye," said researcher Cyril Simon Wedlund of Aalto University's Department of Radio Science and Engineering in Finland.
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The new prediction is based on a laboratory experiment conducted with the Planeterrella simulator and a theoretical and numerical model developed by the Grenoble Institute of Planetology and Astrophysics (IPAG, France) and NASA.
The Planeterrella experiment was conducted in France.
"We replicated the gas of the atmosphere with the most common component on Mars, which is carbon dioxide, after which an electrical discharge was created in a vacuum reminiscent of the Martian upper atmosphere, which led to the formation of a blue glow following the magnetic field structure," said Simon Wedlund.
Aurorae occur when electrically charged particles of solar origin are driven down along the local magnetic field lines, where they enter the planetary atmosphere and excite its atoms and molecules.
On Earth, aurorae are essentially green or red, from atomic oxygen, but even blue-purple, from ionised molecular nitrogen, can be seen.
The study was published in the journal Planetary and Space Science.