Anthony F. Egan
Southwest Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Anthony F. Egan.
Science | 2011
Roger J. Phillips; Brian J. Davis; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Shane Byrne; Michael T. Mellon; Nathaniel E. Putzig; Robert M. Haberle; Melinda A. Kahre; Bruce A. Campbell; L. M. Carter; Isaac B. Smith; J. W. Holt; Suzanne E. Smrekar; Daniel Cahn Nunes; Jeffrey J. Plaut; Anthony F. Egan; Timothy N. Titus; Roberto Seu
Radar measurements reveal a substantial buried deposit of carbon dioxide in the south pole of Mars. Shallow Radar soundings from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter reveal a buried deposit of carbon dioxide (CO2) ice within the south polar layered deposits of Mars with a volume of 9500 to 12,500 cubic kilometers, about 30 times that previously estimated for the south pole residual cap. The deposit occurs within a stratigraphic unit that is uniquely marked by collapse features and other evidence of interior CO2 volatile release. If released into the atmosphere at times of high obliquity, the CO2 reservoir would increase the atmospheric mass by up to 80%, leading to more frequent and intense dust storms and to more regions where liquid water could persist without boiling.
Science | 2010
G. Randall Gladstone; Dana M. Hurley; Kurt D. Retherford; Paul D. Feldman; Wayne R. Pryor; Jean-Yves Chaufray; Maarten H. Versteeg; Thomas K. Greathouse; Andrew Joseph Steffl; Henry Blair Throop; Joel Wm. Parker; David E. Kaufmann; Anthony F. Egan; Michael W. Davis; David C. Slater; J. Mukherjee; Paul F. Miles; Amanda R. Hendrix; Anthony Colaprete; S. Alan Stern
Watering the Moon About a year ago, a spent upper stage of an Atlas rocket was deliberately crashed into a crater at the south pole of the Moon, ejecting a plume of debris, dust, and vapor. The goal of this event, the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) experiment, was to search for water and other volatiles in the soil of one of the coldest places on the Moon: the permanently shadowed region within the Cabeus crater. Using ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared spectroscopy data from accompanying craft, Colaprete et al. (p. 463; see the news story by Kerr; see the cover) found evidence for the presence of water and other volatiles within the ejecta cloud. Schultz et al. (p. 468) monitored the different stages of the impact and the resulting plume. Gladstone et al. (p. 472), using an ultraviolet spectrograph onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), detected H2, CO, Ca, Hg, and Mg in the impact plume, and Hayne et al. (p. 477) measured the thermal signature of the impact and discovered that it had heated a 30 to 200 square-meter region from ∼40 kelvin to at least 950 kelvin. Paige et al. (p. 479) mapped cryogenic zones predictive of volatile entrapment, and Mitrofanov et al. (p. 483) used LRO instruments to confirm that surface temperatures in the south polar region persist even in sunlight. In all, about 155 kilograms of water vapor was emitted during the impact; meanwhile, the LRO continues to orbit the Moon, sending back a stream of data to help us understand the evolution of its complex surface structures. A controlled spacecraft impact into a crater in the lunar south pole plunged through the lunar soil, revealing water and other volatiles. On 9 October 2009, the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) sent a kinetic impactor to strike Cabeus crater, on a mission to search for water ice and other volatiles expected to be trapped in lunar polar soils. The Lyman Alpha Mapping Project (LAMP) ultraviolet spectrograph onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) observed the plume generated by the LCROSS impact as far-ultraviolet emissions from the fluorescence of sunlight by molecular hydrogen and carbon monoxide, plus resonantly scattered sunlight from atomic mercury, with contributions from calcium and magnesium. The observed light curve is well simulated by the expansion of a vapor cloud at a temperature of ~1000 kelvin, containing ~570 kilograms (kg) of carbon monoxide, ~140 kg of molecular hydrogen, ~160 kg of calcium, ~120 kg of mercury, and ~40 kg of magnesium.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2009
L. M. Carter; Bruce A. Campbell; J. W. Holt; Roger J. Phillips; Nathaniel E. Putzig; Stefania Mattei; Roberto Seu; Chris H. Okubo; Anthony F. Egan
[1] The SHARAD instrument on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter detects subsurface interfaces beneath lava flow fields northwest of Ascraeus Mons. The interfaces occur in two locations; a northern flow that originates south of Alba Patera, and a southern flow that originates at the rift zone between Ascraeus and Pavonis Montes. The northern flow has permittivity values, estimated from the time delay of echoes from the basal interface, between 6.2 and 17.3, with an average of 12.2. The southern flow has permittivity values of 7.0 to 14.0, with an average of 9.8. The average permittivity values for the northern and southern flows imply densities of 3.7 and 3.4 g cm ―3 , respectively. Loss tangent values for both flows range from 0.01 to 0.03. The measured bulk permittivity and loss tangent values are consistent with those of terrestrial and lunar basalts, and represent the first measurement of these properties for dense rock on Mars.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2015
Marco Restano; Jeffrey J. Plaut; Bruce A. Campbell; Yonggyu Gim; Daniel Cahn Nunes; Fabrizio Bernardini; Anthony F. Egan; Roberto Seu; Roger J. Phillips
The close passage of Comet C/2013 A1 (Siding Spring) to Mars provided a unique opportunity to observe the interaction of cometary materials with the Martian ionosphere and atmosphere using the sounding radar SHARAD (SHAllow RADar) aboard Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. In two nightside observations, acquired in the 10 h following the closest approach, the SHARAD data reveal a significant increase of the total electron content (TEC). The observed TEC values are typical for daylight hours just after dawn or before sunset but are unprecedented this deep into the night. Results support two predictions indicating that cometary pickup O+ ions, or ions generated from the ablation of cometary dust, are responsible for the creation of an additional ion layer.
Science | 2008
Roger J. Phillips; Maria T. Zuber; Suzanne E. Smrekar; Michael T. Mellon; James W. Head; Kenneth L. Tanaka; Nathaniel E. Putzig; S. M. Milkovich; Bruce A. Campbell; Jeffrey J. Plaut; Ali Safaeinili; Roberto Seu; D. Biccari; L. M. Carter; Giovanni Picardi; Roberto Orosei; P. Surdas Mohit; Essam Heggy; Richard W. Zurek; Anthony F. Egan; Emanuele Giacomoni; Federica Russo; Marco Cutigni; Elena Pettinelli; John W. Holt; Carl Leuschen; Lucia Marinangeli
Icarus | 2009
Nathaniel E. Putzig; Roger J. Phillips; Bruce A. Campbell; J. W. Holt; Jeffrey J. Plaut; L. M. Carter; Anthony F. Egan; Fabrizio Bernardini; Ali Safaeinili; Roberto Seu
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
G. Randall Gladstone; Kurt D. Retherford; Anthony F. Egan; David E. Kaufmann; Paul F. Miles; Joel Wm. Parker; David Horvath; Paul M. Rojas; Maarten H. Versteeg; Michael W. Davis; Thomas K. Greathouse; David C. Slater; J. Mukherjee; Andrew Joseph Steffl; Paul D. Feldman; Dana M. Hurley; Wayne R. Pryor; Amanda R. Hendrix; Erwan Mazarico; S. Alan Stern
Icarus | 2009
L. M. Carter; Bruce A. Campbell; Thomas R. Watters; Roger J. Phillips; Nathaniel E. Putzig; Ali Safaeinili; Jeffrey J. Plaut; Chris H. Okubo; Anthony F. Egan; Roberto Seu; D. Biccari; Roberto Orosei
Space Science Reviews | 2010
G. Randall Gladstone; S. Alan Stern; Kurt D. Retherford; Ronald K. Black; David C. Slater; Michael W. Davis; Maarten H. Versteeg; Kristian B. Persson; Joel Wm. Parker; David E. Kaufmann; Anthony F. Egan; Thomas K. Greathouse; Paul D. Feldman; Dana M. Hurley; Wayne R. Pryor; Amanda R. Hendrix
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Amanda R. Hendrix; Kurt D. Retherford; G. Randall Gladstone; Dana M. Hurley; Paul D. Feldman; Anthony F. Egan; David E. Kaufmann; Paul F. Miles; Joel Wm. Parker; David Horvath; Paul M. Rojas; Maarten H. Versteeg; Michael W. Davis; Thomas K. Greathouse; J. Mukherjee; Andrew Joseph Steffl; Wayne R. Pryor; S. Alan Stern