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Dive into the research topics where Anupam Ghosh is active.

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Featured researches published by Anupam Ghosh.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2000

Mineralogic and compositional properties of Martian soil and dust: Results from Mars Pathfinder

James F. Bell; Harry Y. McSween; Joy A. Crisp; Richard V. Morris; Scott L. Murchie; Nathan T. Bridges; James Richard Johnson; Daniel T. Britt; M. P. Golombek; Henry J. Moore; Anupam Ghosh; Janice L. Bishop; Robert C. Anderson; J. Brückner; T. Economou; J. P. Greenwood; Haraldur Pall Gunnlaugsson; R. M. Hargraves; S. F. Hviid; J. M. Knudsen; M. B. Madsen; Richard J. Reid; R. Rieder; L. A. Soderblom

Mars Pathfinder obtained multispectral, elemental, magnetic, and physical measurements of soil and dust at the Sagan Memorial Station during the course of its 83 sol mission. We describe initial results from these measurements, concentrating on multispectral and elemental data, and use these data, along with previous Viking, SNC meteorite, and telescopic results, to help constrain the origin and evolution of Martian soil and dust. We find that soils and dust can be divided into at least eight distinct spectral units, based on parameterization of Imager for Mars Pathfinder (IMP) 400 to 1000 nm multispectral images. The most distinctive spectral parameters for soils and dust are the reflectivity in the red, the red/blue reflectivity ratio, the near-IR spectral slope, and the strength of the 800 to 1000 nm absorption feature. Most of the Pathfinder spectra are consistent with the presence of poorly crystalline or nanophase ferric oxide(s), sometimes mixed with small but varying degrees of well-crystalline ferric and ferrous phases. Darker soil units appear to be coarser-grained, compacted, and/or mixed with a larger amount of dark ferrous materials relative to bright soils. Nanophase goethite, akaganeite, schwertmannite, and maghemite are leading candidates for the origin of the absorption centered near 900 nm in IMP spectra. The ferrous component in the soil cannot be well-constrained based on IMP data. Alpha proton X-ray spectrometer (APXS) measurements of six soil units show little variability within the landing site and show remarkable overall similarity to the average Viking-derived soil elemental composition. Differences exist between Viking and Pathfinder soils, however, including significantly higher S and Cl abundances and lower Si abundances in Viking soils and the lack of a correlation between Ti and Fe in Pathfinder soils. No significant linear correlations were observed between IMP spectral properties and APXS elemental chemistry. Attempts at constraining the mineralogy of soils and dust using normative calculations involving mixtures of smectites and silicate and oxide minerals did not yield physically acceptable solutions. We attempted to use the Pathfinder results to constrain a number of putative soil and dust formation scenarios, including palagonitization and acid-fog weathering. While the Pathfinder soils cannot be chemically linked to the Pathfinder rocks by palagonitization, this study and McSween et al. [1999] suggest that palagonitic alteration of a Martian basaltic rock, plus mixture with a minor component of locally derived andesitic rock fragments, could be consistent with the observed soil APXS and IMP properties.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Characterization and petrologic interpretation of olivine‐rich basalts at Gusev Crater, Mars

Y. McSween; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Ralf Gellert; James F. Bell; Richard V. Morris; K. E. Herkenhoff; Larry S. Crumpler; Keith A. Milam; Karen R. Stockstill; Livio L. Tornabene; Raymond E. Arvidson; Paul Bartlett; Diana L. Blaney; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Philip R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; Joy A. Crisp; D. J. Des Marais; T. Economou; Jack D. Farmer; William H. Farrand; Anupam Ghosh; M. P. Golombek; S. Gorevan; Ronald Greeley; Victoria E. Hamilton; James Richard Johnson; B. L. Joliff; G. Klingelhöfer; Amy T. Knudson

Additional co-authors: PR Christensen, BC Clark, JA Crisp, DJ DesMarais, T Economou, JD Farmer, W Farrand, A Ghosh, M Golombek, S Gorevan, R Greeley, VE Hamilton, JR Johnson, BL Joliff, G Klingelhofer, AT Knudson, S McLennan, D Ming, JE Moersch, R Rieder, SW Ruff, PA de Souza Jr, SW Squyres, H Wnke, A Wang, A Yen, J Zipfel


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1999

Chemical, multispectral, and textural constraints on the composition and origin of rocks at the Mars Pathfinder landing site

Harry Y. McSween; Scott L. Murchie; Joy A. Crisp; Nathan T. Bridges; Robert C. Anderson; James F. Bell; Daniel T. Britt; J. Brückner; G. Dreibus; Thanasis E. Economou; Anupam Ghosh; M. P. Golombek; J. P. Greenwood; James Richard Johnson; Henry J. Moore; Richard V. Morris; T. J. Parker; R. Rieder; Robert B. Singer; H. Wänke

Rocks at the Mars Pathfinder site are probably locally derived. Textures on rock surfaces may indicate volcanic, sedimentary, or impact-generated rocks, but aeolian abration and dust coatings prevent unambiguous interpretation. Multispectral imaging has resolved four spectral classes of rocks: gray and red, which occur on different surfaces of the same rocks; pink, which is probably soil crusts; and maroon, which occurs as large boulders, mostly in the far field. Rocks are assigned to two spectral trends based on the position of peak reflectance: the primary spectral trend contains gray, red, and pink rocks; maroon rocks constitute the secondary spectral trend. The spatial pattern of spectral variations observed is oriented along the prevailing wind direction. The primary spectral trend arises from thin ferric coatings of aeolian dust on darker rocks. The secondary spectral trend is apparently due to coating by a different mineral, probably maghemite or ferrihydrite. A chronology based on rock spectra suggests that rounded maroon boulders constitute the oldest petrologic unit (a flood deposit), succeeded by smaller cobbles possibly deposited by impact, and followed by aeolian erosion and deposition. Nearly linear chemical trends in alpha proton X-ray spectrometer rock compositions are interpreted as mixing lines between rock and adhering dust, a conclusion supported by a correlation between sulfur abundance and red/blue spectral ratio. Extrapolations of regression lines to zero sulfur give the composition of a presumed igneous rock. The chemistry and normative mineralogy of the sulfur-free rock resemble common terrestrial volcanic rocks, and its classification corresponds to andesite. Igneous rocks of this composition may occur with clastic sedimentary rocks or impact melts and breccias. However, the spectral mottling expected on conglomerates or breccias is not observed in any APXS-analyzed rocks. Interpretation of the rocks as andesites is complicated by absence of a “1 μm” pyroxene absorption band. Plausible explanations include impact glass, band masking by magnetite, or presence of calcium- and iron-rich pyroxenes and olivine which push the absorption band minimum past the imagers spectral range. The inferred andesitic composition is most similar to terrestrial anorogenic icelandites, formed by fractionation of tholeiitic basaltic magmas. Early melting of a relatively primitive Martian mantle could produce an appropriate parent magma, supporting the ancient age of Pathfinder rocks inferred from their incorporation in Hesperian flood deposits. Although rocks of andesitic composition at the Pathfinder site may represent samples of ancient Martian crust, inferences drawn about a necessary role for water or plate tectonics in their petrogenesis are probably unwarranted.


Science | 2014

Ancient Aqueous Environments at Endeavour Crater, Mars

Raymond E. Arvidson; Steven W. Squyres; James F. Bell; Jeffrey G. Catalano; B. C. Clark; Larry S. Crumpler; P. A. de Souza; Alberto G. Fairén; William H. Farrand; V. K. Fox; R. Gellert; Anupam Ghosh; M. P. Golombek; John P. Grotzinger; Edward A. Guinness; K. E. Herkenhoff; Bradley L. Jolliff; Andrew H. Knoll; R. Li; Scott M. McLennan; D. W. Ming; D. W. Mittlefehldt; J. M. Moore; Richard V. Morris; Scott L. Murchie; T. J. Parker; Gale Paulsen; J. W. Rice; Steven W. Ruff; M. D. Smith

Opportunity has investigated in detail rocks on the rim of the Noachian age Endeavour crater, where orbital spectral reflectance signatures indicate the presence of Fe+3-rich smectites. The signatures are associated with fine-grained, layered rocks containing spherules of diagenetic or impact origin. The layered rocks are overlain by breccias, and both units are cut by calcium sulfate veins precipitated from fluids that circulated after the Endeavour impact. Compositional data for fractures in the layered rocks suggest formation of Al-rich smectites by aqueous leaching. Evidence is thus preserved for water-rock interactions before and after the impact, with aqueous environments of slightly acidic to circum-neutral pH that would have been more favorable for prebiotic chemistry and microorganisms than those recorded by younger sulfate-rich rocks at Meridiani Planum.


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2005

Provenance and diagenesis of the evaporite-bearing Burns formation, Meridiani Planum, Mars

Scott M. McLennan; James F. Bell; Wendy M. Calvin; Philip R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; P. A. de Souza; Jack D. Farmer; William H. Farrand; David A. Fike; Ralf Gellert; Anupam Ghosh; Timothy D. Glotch; John P. Grotzinger; Brian C. Hahn; K. E. Herkenhoff; Joel A. Hurowitz; James Richard Johnson; Sarah Stewart Johnson; Bradley L. Jolliff; G. Klingelhöfer; Andrew H. Knoll; Z. A. Learner; M. C. Malin; Harry Y. McSween; J. Pocock; Steven W. Ruff; L. A. Soderblom; Steven W. Squyres; Nicholas J. Tosca; Wesley Andres Watters


Science | 2004

Basaltic rocks analyzed by the Spirit Rover in Gusev Crater

Harry Y. McSween; Raymond E. Arvidson; James F. Bell; Diana L. Blaney; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Philip R. Christensen; Benton C. Clark; Joy A. Crisp; Larry S. Crumpler; D. J. Des Marais; Jack D. Farmer; Ralf Gellert; Anupam Ghosh; S. Gorevan; T. G. Graff; John A. Grant; Larry A. Haskin; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; James Richard Johnson; Bradley L. Jolliff; G. Klingelhöfer; Amy T. Knudson; Scott M. McLennan; Keith A. Milam; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Richard V. Morris; R. Rieder; Steven W. Ruff; P. A. de Souza; Steven W. Squyres


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Mineralogy of volcanic rocks in Gusev Crater, Mars: Reconciling Mössbauer, Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer, and Miniature Thermal Emission Spectrometer spectra

Harry Y. McSween; Steven W. Ruff; Richard V. Morris; R. Gellert; G. Klingelhöfer; Philip R. Christensen; Timothy J. McCoy; Anupam Ghosh; J. M. Moersch; Barbara A. Cohen; A. D. Rogers; C. Schröder; Steven W. Squyres; Joy A. Crisp; Albert S. Yen


Archive | 2006

Asteroidal Heating and Thermal Stratification of the Asteroidal Belt

Anupam Ghosh; Stuart J. Weidenschilling; Harry Y. McSween; Alexandra Rubin


Archive | 1998

Mineralogy, Composition, and Origin of Soil and Dust at the Mars Pathfinder Landing Site

Jeffrey F. Bell; Robert C. Anderson; James Bishop; Nathan T. Bridges; Daniel T. Britt; Joy A. Crisp; T. Economou; Anupam Ghosh; John P. Greenwood; H. P. Gunnlaugsson; Robert B. Hargraves; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; S. F. Hviid; James Richard Johnson; J. M. Knudsen; M. B. Madsen; Harry Y. McSween; Richard V. Morris; Scott L. Murchie; Richard J. Reid


Archive | 2004

Preliminary Mineralogy and Geochemistry Results at the MER-A Landing Site in Gusev

Harry Y. McSween; Raymond E. Arvidson; Joshua L. Bandfield; James F. Bell; Diana L. Blaney; Wendy M. Calvin; P. R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; Joy A. Crisp; T. Economou; William H. Farrand; Anupam Ghosh; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; James Richard Johnson; G. Klingelhöfer; Scott M. McLennan; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Richard V. Morris; Rudi Rieder; Steven W. Ruff; C. Schroeder; P. A. de Souza; Steven W. Squyres; H. Wänke; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Jutta Zipfel

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James F. Bell

Arizona State University

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James Richard Johnson

United States Geological Survey

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Joy A. Crisp

California Institute of Technology

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Steven W. Ruff

Arizona State University

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