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Featured researches published by Andre Brahic.


Science | 2006

Cassini Observes the Active South Pole of Enceladus

Carolyn C. Porco; Paul Helfenstein; Peter C. Thomas; A. P. Ingersoll; Jack Wisdom; Robert West; G. Neukum; Tilmann Denk; Roland Wagner; Thomas Roatsch; Susan Werner Kieffer; Elizabeth P. Turtle; Alfred S. McEwen; Torrence V. Johnson; Julie Ann Rathbun; J. Veverka; Daren Wilson; Jason Perry; Joe Spitale; Andre Brahic; Joseph A. Burns; Anthony D. DelGenio; Luke Dones; Carl D. Murray; Steven W. Squyres

Cassini has identified a geologically active province at the south pole of Saturns moon Enceladus. In images acquired by the Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS), this region is circumscribed by a chain of folded ridges and troughs at ∼55°S latitude. The terrain southward of this boundary is distinguished by its albedo and color contrasts, elevated temperatures, extreme geologic youth, and narrow tectonic rifts that exhibit coarse-grained ice and coincide with the hottest temperatures measured in the region. Jets of fine icy particles that supply Saturns E ring emanate from this province, carried aloft by water vapor probably venting from subsurface reservoirs of liquid water. The shape of Enceladus suggests a possible intense heating epoch in the past by capture into a 1:4 secondary spin/orbit resonance.


Science | 1989

Voyager 2 at Neptune: Imaging Science Results

Bradford A. Smith; L. A. Soderblom; Donald J. Banfield; c. Barnet; A. T. Basilevsky; R. F. Beebe; K. Bollinger; Joseph M. Boyce; Andre Brahic; Geoffrey Briggs; Robert H. Brown; Christopher F. Chyba; Stewart A. Collins; Allan F. Cook; David Crisp; Steven K. Croft; Dale P. Cruikshank; Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; G. E. Danielson; Merton E. Davies; E. De Jong; Luke Dones; David Godfrey; J. Goguen; I. Grenier; V. R. Haemmerle; Heidi B. Hammel; Carl J. Hansen; c. P. Helfenstein; C. Howell

Voyager 2 images of Neptune reveal a windy planet characterized by bright clouds of methane ice suspended in an exceptionally clear atmosphere above a lower deck of hydrogen sulfide or ammonia ices. Neptunes atmosphere is dominated by a large anticyclonic storm system that has been named the Great Dark Spot (GDS). About the same size as Earth in extent, the GDS bears both many similarities and some differences to the Great Red Spot of Jupiter. Neptunes zonal wind profile is remarkably similar to that of Uranus. Neptune has three major rings at radii of 42,000, 53,000, and 63,000 kilometers. The outer ring contains three higher density arc-like segments that were apparently responsible for most of the ground-based occultation events observed during the current decade. Like the rings of Uranus, the Neptune rings are composed of very dark material; unlike that of Uranus, the Neptune system is very dusty. Six new regular satellites were found, with dark surfaces and radii ranging from 200 to 25 kilometers. All lie inside the orbit of Triton and the inner four are located within the ring system. Triton is seen to be a differentiated body, with a radius of 1350 kilometers and a density of 2.1 grams per cubic centimeter; it exhibits clear evidence of early episodes of surface melting. A now rigid crust of what is probably water ice is overlain with a brilliant coating of nitrogen frost, slightly darkened and reddened with organic polymer material. Streaks of organic polymer suggest seasonal winds strong enough to move particles of micrometer size or larger, once they become airborne. At least two active plumes were seen, carrying dark material 8 kilometers above the surface before being transported downstream by high level winds. The plumes may be driven by solar heating and the subsequent violent vaporization of subsurface nitrogen.


Nature | 2005

Imaging of Titan from the Cassini spacecraft

Carolyn C. Porco; Emily Baker; John M. Barbara; K. A. Beurle; Andre Brahic; Joseph A. Burns; Sebastien Charnoz; N. J. Cooper; Douglas Duane Dawson; Anthony D. Del Genio; Tilmann Denk; Luke Dones; Ulyana A. Dyudina; Michael W. Evans; S. Fussner; Bernd Giese; Kevin R. Grazier; Paul Helfenstein; Andrew P. Ingersoll; Robert A. Jacobson; Torrence V. Johnson; Alfred S. McEwen; Carl D. Murray; Gerhard Neukum; W. M. Owen; Jason Perry; Thomas Roatsch; Joseph Nicholas Spitale; Steven W. Squyres; Peter C. Thomas

Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, is the only satellite in the Solar System with a substantial atmosphere. The atmosphere is poorly understood and obscures the surface, leading to intense speculation about Titans nature. Here we present observations of Titan from the imaging science experiment onboard the Cassini spacecraft that address some of these issues. The images reveal intricate surface albedo features that suggest aeolian, tectonic and fluvial processes; they also show a few circular features that could be impact structures. These observations imply that substantial surface modification has occurred over Titans history. We have not directly detected liquids on the surface to date. Convective clouds are found to be common near the south pole, and the motion of mid-latitude clouds consistently indicates eastward winds, from which we infer that the troposphere is rotating faster than the surface. A detached haze at an altitude of 500 km is 150–200 km higher than that observed by Voyager, and more tenuous haze layers are also resolved.


Science | 2005

Cassini Discovers a Kinematic Spiral Ring Around Saturn

Sebastien Charnoz; Carolyn C. Porco; E. Déau; Andre Brahic; Joseph Nicholas Spitale; G. Bacques; K. Baillie

Since the time of the Voyager flybys of Saturn in 1980–1981, Saturns eccentric F ring has been known to be accompanied on either side by faint strands of material. New Cassini observations show that these strands, initially interpreted as concentric ring segments, are in fact connected and form a single one-arm trailing spiral winding at least three times around Saturn. The spiral rotates around Saturn with the orbital motion of its constituent particles. This structure is likely the result of differential orbital motion stretching an initial cloud of particles scattered from the dense core of the F ring. Different scenarios of formation, implying ringlet-satellite interactions, are explored. A recently discovered moon candidate, S/2004 S6, is on an orbit that crosses the F-ring core at the intersection of the spiral with the ring, which suggests a dynamical connection between S/2004 S6 and the spiral.


Icarus | 1975

A numerical study of a gravitating system of colliding particles: Applications to the dynamics of Saturn's rings and to the formation of the solar system☆

Andre Brahic

Abstract We consider numerically a three-dimensional system of particles moving in the gravitational field of a central mass point and interacting through inelastic collisions. After a very fast flattering, the system reaches a quasiequilibrium state in which there are still collisions and the rings tend to a finite thickness of a few times the mean size of the particles.


Icarus | 1987

Oblateness, radius, and mean stratospheric temperature of Neptune from the 1985 August 20 occultation

William B. Hubbard; Philip D. Nicholson; E. Lellouch; Bruno Sicardy; Andre Brahic; Faith Vilas; P. Bouchet; Robert Alexander McLaren; Robert L. Millis; Lawrence H. Wasserman; J.H. Elias; Keith Y. Matthews; J.D. McGill; C. Perrier

Abstract The occultation of a bright ( K ∼6) infrared star by Neptune revealed a central flash at two stations and provided accurate measurements of the limb position at these and several additional stations. We have fitted this data ensemble with a general model of an oblate atmosphere to deduce the oblateness e and equatorial radius a 0 of Neptune at the 1-μbar pressure level, and the position angle p n of the projected spin axis. The results are e =0.0209±0.0014, a 0 =25269±10 km, p n =20.1°±1°. Parameters derived from fitting to the limb data alone are in excellent agreement with parameters derived from fitting to central flash data alone (E. Lellouch, W.B. Hubbard, B. Sicardy, F. Vilas, and P. Bouchet, 1986, Nature 324, 227–231) , and the principal remaining source of uncertainty appears to be the Neptune-centered declination of the Earth at the time of occultation. As an alternative to the methane absorption model proposed by Lellouch et al ., we explain an observed reduction in the central flash intensity by a decrease in temperature from 150 to 135°K as the pressure rises from 1 to 400 μbar. Implications of the oblateness results for Neptune interior models are briefly discussed.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

Short-term collisional evolution of a disc perturbed by a giant-planet embryo

Sebastien Charnoz; Philippe Thebault; Andre Brahic

A simple numerical model has been developed to study the evolution of a disc of planetesimals under mutual inelastic collisions in the potential field of a central body and of an embedded giant-planet embryo. Masses for the latter range from 0.5 to 300 Earth masses. A mass of


Icarus | 1991

Neptune's rings, 1983–1989: Ground-based stellar occultation observations: I. Ring-like arc detections

Bruno Sicardy; Francoise Roques; Andre Brahic

15 M_{\oplus}


Planetary and Space Science | 1998

Dynamical influence of a proto-Jupiter on a disc of colliding planetesimals

P. Thébault; Andre Brahic

is typical of the solid-core model for the formation of giant planets. The initially cold disc consists of a few thousand particles. Those initially present between one and three Hill radii from the perturbers orbit are transferred to very eccentric orbits causing violent collisions throughout the disc. The perturbation propagates far from the perturber, like a heat transfer: a


Journal of Computational Physics | 1976

Numerical simulation of a system of colliding bodies in a gravitational field

Andre Brahic

15 M_{\oplus}

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Luke Dones

Southwest Research Institute

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Carl D. Murray

Queen Mary University of London

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Estelle Deau

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Michael W. Evans

Queen Mary University of London

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