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Featured researches published by C. Backus.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Mars Climate Sounder limb profile retrieval of atmospheric temperature, pressure, and dust and water ice opacity

Armin Kleinböhl; John T. Schofield; David Michael Kass; Wedad A. Abdou; C. Backus; B. Sen; James H. Shirley; W. Gregory Lawson; Mark I. Richardson; F. W. Taylor; Nicholas A. Teanby; Daniel J. McCleese

The Mars Climate Sounder (MCS) onboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is the latest of a series of investigations devoted to improving the understanding of current Martian climate. MCS is a nine-channel passive midinfrared and far-infrared filter radiometer designed to measure thermal emission in limb and on-planet geometries from which vertical profiles of atmospheric temperature, water vapor, dust, and condensates can be retrieved. Here we describe the algorithm that is used to retrieve atmospheric profiles from MCS limb measurements for delivery to the Planetary Data System. The algorithm is based on a modified Chahine method and uses a fast radiative transfer scheme based on the Curtis-Godson approximation. It retrieves pressure and vertical profiles of atmospheric temperature, dust opacity, and water ice opacity. Water vapor retrievals involve a different approach and will be reported separately. Pressure can be retrieved to a precision of 1–2% and is used to establish the vertical coordinate. Temperature profiles are retrieved over a range from 5–10 to 80–90 km altitude with a typical altitude resolution of 4–6 km and a precision between 0.5 and 2 K over most of this altitude range. Dust and water ice opacity profiles also achieve vertical resolutions of about 5 km and typically have precisions of 10^(−4)–10^(−5) km^(−1) at 463 cm^(−1) and 843 cm^(−1), respectively. Examples of temperature profiles as well as dust and water ice opacity profiles from the first year of the MCS mission are presented, and atmospheric features observed during periods employing different MCS operational modes are described. An intercomparison with historical temperature measurements from the Mars Global Surveyor mission shows good agreement.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1992

COBE differential microwave radiometers - Calibration techniques

C. L. Bennett; George F. Smoot; Michael A. Janssen; Samuel Gulkis; A. Kogut; G. Hinshaw; C. Backus; Michael G. Hauser; John C. Mather; L. Rokke; L. Tenorio; Ron Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; G. De Amici; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; T. Kelsall; R. Kummerer; C. Lineweaver; S. H. Moseley; Thomas L. Murdock; J. Santana; Richard A. Shafer; R. F. Silverberg

The COBE spacecraft was launched November 18, 1989 UT carrying three scientific instruments into earth orbit for studies of cosmology. One of these instruments, the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR), is designed to measure the large-angular-scale temperature anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation at three frequencies (31.5, 53, and 90 GHz). This paper presents three methods used to calibrate the DMR. First, the signal difference between beam-filling hot and cold targets observed on the ground provides a primary calibration that is transferred to space by noise sources internal to the instrument. Second, the moon is used in flight as an external calibration source. Third, the signal arising from the Doppler effect due to the earths motion around the barycenter of the solar system is used as an external calibration source. Preliminary analysis of the external source calibration techniques confirms the accuracy of the currently more precise ground-based calibration. Assuming the noise source behavior did not change from the ground-based calibration to flight, a 0.1-0.4 percent relative and 0.7-2.5 percent absolute calibration uncertainty is derived, depending on radiometer channel.


Advances in Space Research | 1991

First results of the COBE satellite measurement of the anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation

George F. Smoot; C. L. Bennett; A. Kogut; J. Aymon; C. Backus; G. De Amici; K. Galuk; P. D. Jackson; P. Keegstra; L. Rokke; L. Tenorio; S. Torres; S. G. Gulkis; M.G. Hauser; Michael A. Janssen; John C. Mather; Rainer Weiss; D. T. Wilkinson; E. L. Wright; N. W. Boggess; Edward S. Cheng; T. Kelsall; P. M. Lubin; Stephan S. Meyer; S. H. Moseley; Thomas L. Murdock; Richard A. Shafer; R. F. Silverberg

Abstract We review the concept and operation of the Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) instrument aboard NASAs Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite, with emphasis on the software identification and subtraction of potential systematic effects. We present preliminary results obtained from the first six months of DMR data and discuss implications for cosmology.


Space Science Reviews | 2007

Miro : Microwave instrument for rosetta orbiter

Samuel Gulkis; Margaret A. Frerking; Jacques Crovisier; G. Beaudin; Paul Hartogh; P. Encrenaz; T. Koch; C. Kahn; Y. Salinas; R. Nowicki; R. Irigoyen; Michael A. Janssen; P. Stek; Mark Hofstadter; Mark Allen; C. Backus; L. W. Kamp; C. Jarchow; E. Steinmetz; A. Deschamps; J. Krieg; M. Gheudin; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; N. Biver; Therese Encrenaz; D. Despois; Wing-Huen Ip; E. Lellouch; Ingrid Mann; Duane O. Muhleman


Planetary and Space Science | 2012

Continuum and spectroscopic observations of asteroid (21) Lutetia at millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths with the MIRO instrument on the Rosetta spacecraft

Samuel Gulkis; Stephen J. Keihm; L. W. Kamp; Seungwon Lee; Paul Hartogh; Jacques Crovisier; Emmanuel Lellouch; P. Encrenaz; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Mark Hofstadter; Gerard Beaudin; Michael A. Janssen; Paul R. Weissman; P. von Allmen; T. Encrenaz; C. Backus; Wing-Huen Ip; P. Schloerb; N. Biver; Thomas R. Spilker; Ingrid Mann


Planetary and Space Science | 2010

Millimeter and submillimeter measurements of asteroid (2867) Steins during the Rosetta fly-by

Samuel Gulkis; Stephen J. Keihm; L. W. Kamp; C. Backus; Michael A. Janssen; Seungwon Lee; B. Davidsson; Gerard Beaudin; N. Biver; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Jacques Crovisier; P. Encrenaz; T. Encrenaz; Paul Hartogh; Mark Hofstadter; Wing-Huen Ip; E. Lellouch; Ingrid Mann; P. Schloerb; Thomas R. Spilker; Margaret A. Frerking


Planetary and Space Science | 2007

Remote sensing of a comet at millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths from an orbiting spacecraft

Samuel Gulkis; Mark Allen; C. Backus; Gerard Beaudin; N. Biver; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Jacques Crovisier; Didier Despois; P. Encrenaz; Margaret A. Frerking; Mark Hofstadter; Paul Hartogh; Wing Ip; Mike Janssen; L. W. Kamp; T. Koch; E. Lellouch; Ingrid Mann; Duane O. Muhleman; H. Rauer; P. Schloerb; Thomas R. Spilker


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Mars Climate Sounder limb profile retrieval of atmospheric temperature, pressure, and dust and water ice opacity: MCS RETRIEVALS

Armin Kleinböhl; John T. Schofield; David Michael Kass; Wedad A. Abdou; C. Backus; B. Sen; James H. Shirley; W. Gregory Lawson; Mark I. Richardson; F. W. Taylor; Nicholas A. Teanby; Daniel J. McCleese


Archive | 2010

Rosetta-Orbiter Check Miro 2 Cvp Commissioning V1.0

Samuel Gulkis; C. Backus; Michael A. Janssen; L. W. Kamp; E. Al


Archive | 2010

Rosetta-Orbiter CAL Miro 2 Grnd Thermal-Vac V1.0

Samuel Gulkis; C. Backus; Michael A. Janssen; L. W. Kamp; E. Al

Collaboration


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Michael A. Janssen

California Institute of Technology

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Samuel Gulkis

California Institute of Technology

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L. W. Kamp

California Institute of Technology

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C. L. Bennett

Johns Hopkins University

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A. Kogut

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. Aymon

University of California

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L. Tenorio

University of California

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Mark Hofstadter

California Institute of Technology

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