Jackson, Brian
The influence of dust devils on the martian atmosphere depends on their capacity to loft dust, which depends on their wind profiles and footprint on the martian surface, i.e., on their radii, $R$. Previous work suggests the wind profile depends on a devil's thermodynamic efficiency, which scales with its height, $h$. However, the precise mechanisms...
Brossier, J.F. Gilmore, M.S. Toner, K.
Published in
Icarus
Multiple studies reveal that most of Venus highlands exhibit anomalously high radar reflectivity and low radar emissivity relative to the lowlands. This phenomenon is thought to be the result of atmosphere-surface interactions in the highlands, due to lower temperatures. These reactions are a function of rock composition, atmospheric composition, a...
Bishop, Janice L. Gross, Christoph Danielsen, Jacob Parente, Mario Murchie, Scott L. Horgan, Briony Wray, James J. Viviano, Christina Seelos, Frank P.
Published in
Icarus
Refined calibrations of CRISM images are enabling identification of smaller deposits of unique aqueous materials on Mars that reveal changing environmental conditions at the region surrounding Mawrth Vallis. Through characterization of these clay-sulfate assemblages and their association with the layered, phyllosilicate units of this region, more d...
Quillen, Alice C. Lane, Mckenzie Nakajima, Miki Wright, Esteban
Mass-spring model simulations are used to investigate past spin states of a viscoelastic Phobos and Deimos. From an initially tidally locked state, we find crossing of a spin-orbit resonance with Mars or a mean motion resonance with each other does not excite tumbling in Phobos or Deimos. However, once tumbling our simulations show that these moons...
Heavens, Nicholas G. Kass, David M. Kleinböhl, Armin Schofield, John T.
Published in
Icarus
Gravity waves in Mars’s atmosphere strongly affect the general circulation as well as middle atmospheric cloud formation, but the climatology and sources of gravity waves in the lower atmosphere remain poorly understood. At Earth, the statistical variance in satellite observations of thermal emission above the instrumental noise floor has been used...
Combi, Michael Shou, Yinsi Fougere, Nicolas Tenishev, Valeriy Altwegg, Kathrin Rubin, Martin Bockelée-Morvan, Dominique Capaccioni, Fabrizio Cheng, Yu-Chi Fink, Uwe
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The Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis (ROSINA) suite of instruments operated throughout the over two years of the Rosetta mission operations in the vicinity of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. It measured gas densities and composition throughout the comet's atmosphere, or coma. Here we present two-years' worth of measurement...
Smith, Michael D
Published in
Icarus
The move of the Odyssey spacecraft during Mars Years 31 and 32 to an orbit with local time near 7:00 AM and PM has enabled the systematic retrieval of water ice cloud optical depth using THEMIS thermal infrared images at a time of day not accessible from Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, or previous Odyssey observations. Because wa...
Hurford, T.A. Henning, W.G. Maguire, R. Lekic, V. Schmerr, N. Panning, M. Bray, V.J. Manga, M. Kattenhorn, S.A. Quick, L.C.
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Published in
Icarus
Tidal interactions between planets or stars and the bodies that orbit them dissipate energy in their interiors. The dissipated energy heats the interior and a fraction of that energy will be released as seismic energy. Here we formalize a model to describe the tidally-driven seismic activity on planetary bodies based on tidal dissipation. To constr...
Deutsch, Ariel N Neumann, Gregory A Head, James W Wilson, Lionel
Published in
Icarus
Four, quasi-circular, positive Bouguer gravity anomalies (PBGAs) that are similar in diameter (~90-190 km) and gravitational amplitude (>140 mGal contrast) are identified within the central Oceanus Procellarum region of the Moon. These spatially associated PBGAs are located south of Aristarchus Plateau, north of Flamsteed crater, and two are within...
Goossens, Sander Mazarico, Erwan Ishihara, Yoshiaki Archinal, Brent Gaddis, Lisa
Published in
Icarus
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s (JAXA) Kaguya spacecraft carried a suite of instruments to map the Moon and its environment globally. During its extended mission, the average altitude was 50 km or lower, and Kaguya science products using these data hence have an increased spatial resolution. However, the geodetic position quality of these ...