Two different shots of rusty Mars next to each other. On the left you can see Mars and lots of defining surface features. Dark mountains, large blank plains, white caps on the North and South poles. On the right image, Mars is totally covered in dust and you can barely make out any of those features.

Mars Before and During Global Dust Storm

Two dramatically different faces of the Red Planet appear in these comparison images showing how a global dust storm engulfed Mars with the onset of spring in the Martian southern hemisphere. When the Hubble Space Telescope imaged Mars in June 2001 (left), the seeds of the storm were caught brewing in the giant Hellas Basin (oval at 4 o'clock position on disk) and in another storm at the northern polar cap. When Hubble photographed Mars in early September 2001 (right), the storm had already been raging across the planet for nearly two months, obscuring all surface features. The fine airborne dust blocks a significant amount of sunlight from reaching the Martian surface. Because the airborne dust is absorbing this sunlight, it heats the upper atmosphere. Seasonal global Mars dust storms have been observed from telescopes for over a century, but this is the biggest storm seen in the past several decades. Mars looks gibbous in the right photograph because is it 26 million miles farther from Earth than in the left photo (though the pictures have been scaled to the same angular size), and our viewing angle has changed. The left picture was taken when Mars was near its closest approach to Earth for 2001; at that point the disk of Mars was fully illuminated as seen from Earth because Mars was exactly opposite the Sun. For more information, visit: hubblesite.org/news_release/news/2001-31

Credits: NASA, James Bell (Cornell Univ.), Michael Wolff (Space Science Inst.), and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)