Researchers in the Czech Republic say they may have observed the signature of a “whistler” in a one-second snapshot captured by the MAVEN probe orbiting Mars. The event, observed in the ionosphere of the planet, would be the first lightning-like electric discharge activity ever to be seen there and the finding will be important for understanding atmospheric processes in the Martian atmosphere. “Whistlers are well known on Earth and are associated with lightning,” explains space physicist František Němec at Charles University, who led this research effort. “Our result implies that this phenomenon also occurs on our planetary neighbour.” Unlike Earth, Mars does not have a global magnetic field, but only localized fields created by magnetized materials in the planet’s crust. And because its atmosphere is thin, lightning on this planet does not originate in water clouds but instead in dust storms, similar to those observed in volcanic eruptions here on Earth, and in dust devils.…