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Featured researches published by Carl B. Pilcher.


Science | 1972

Galilean Satellites: Identification of Water Frost

Carl B. Pilcher; Stephen T. Ridgway; Thomas B. McCord

Water frost absorptions have been detected in the infrared reflectivities of Jupiters Galilean satellites JII (Europa) and JIII (Ganymede). We have determined the percentage of frost-covered surface area to be 50 to 100 percent for JII, 20 to 65 percent for JIII, and possibly 5 to 25 percent for JIV (Callisto). The leading side of JIII has 20 percent more frost cover than the trailing side, which explains the visible geometric albedo differences between the two sides. The reflectivity of the material underlying the frost on JII, JIII, and JIV resembles that of silicates. The surface of JI (Io) may be covered by frost particles much smaller than those on JII and JIII.


Science | 1992

Galileo encounter with 951 gaspra: first pictures of an asteroid.

M. J. S. Belton; Joseph Veverka; Peter C. Thomas; Paul Helfenstein; D. P. Simonelli; Clark R. Chapman; Merton E. Davies; Ronald Greeley; Richard Greenberg; James W. Head; Scott L. Murchie; Kenneth P. Klaasen; Torrence V. Johnson; Alfred S. McEwen; David Morrison; Gerhard Neukum; Fraser P. Fanale; Clifford D. Anger; Michael H. Carr; Carl B. Pilcher

Galileo images of Gaspra reveal it to be an irregularly shaped object (19 by 12 by 11 kilometers) that appears to have been created by a catastrophic collisional disruption of a precursor parent body. The cratering age of the surface is about 200 million years. Subtle albedo and color variations appear to correlate with morphological features: Brighter materials are associated with craters especially along the crests of ridges, have a stronger 1-micrometer absorption, and may represent freshly excavated mafic materials; darker materials exhibiting a significantly weaker 1-micrometer absorption appear concentrated in interridge areas. One explanation of these patterns is that Gaspra is covered with a thin regolith and that some of this material has migrated downslope in some areas.


Science | 1996

Galileo's First Images of Jupiter and the Galilean Satellites

M. J. S. Belton; James W. Head; A. P. Ingersoll; Ronald Greeley; Alfred S. McEwen; Kenneth P. Klaasen; David A. Senske; Robert T. Pappalardo; G. C. Collins; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Robert John Sullivan; D. P. Simonelli; P. E. Geissler; Michael H. Carr; Merton E. Davies; J. Veverka; Peter J. Gierasch; Donald J. Banfield; M. Bell; Clark R. Chapman; Clifford D. Anger; Richard Greenberg; G. Neukum; Carl B. Pilcher; R. F. Beebe; Joseph A. Burns; Fraser P. Fanale; W. Ip; Torrence V. Johnson; David R. Morrison

The first images of Jupiter, Io, Europa, and Ganymede from the Galileo spacecraft reveal new information about Jupiters Great Red Spot (GRS) and the surfaces of the Galilean satellites. Features similar to clusters of thunderstorms were found in the GRS. Nearby wave structures suggest that the GRS may be a shallow atmospheric feature. Changes in surface color and plume distribution indicate differences in resurfacing processes near hot spots on Io. Patchy emissions were seen while Io was in eclipse by Jupiter. The outer margins of prominent linear markings (triple bands) on Europa are diffuse, suggesting that material has been vented from fractures. Numerous small circular craters indicate localized areas of relatively old surface. Pervasive brittle deformation of an ice layer appears to have formed grooves on Ganymede. Dark terrain unexpectedly shows distinctive albedo variations to the limit of resolution.


Science | 1970

Saturn's Rings: Identification of Water Frost

Carl B. Pilcher; Clark R. Chapman; Larry A. Lebofsky; Hugh H. Kieffer

A recently published infrared spectrum of Saturns rings resembles our laboratory spectra of water frosts. Furthermore, there are discrepancies between the ring spectrum and ammonia frost spectra in the 2- to 2.5-� region. These discrepancies render unlikely a reported ideti tification of ammonia frost in the ring spectrum.


Science | 1994

First images of asteroid 243 Ida

M. J. S. Belton; Clark R. Chapman; Joseph Veverka; Kenneth P. Klaasen; A. Harch; Ronald Greeley; Richard Greenberg; James W. Head; Alfred S. McEwen; David Morrison; Peter C. Thomas; Merton E. Davies; Michael H. Carr; G. Neukum; Fraser P. Fanale; Donald R. Davis; Clifford D. Anger; Peter J. Gierasch; A. P. Ingersoll; Carl B. Pilcher

The first images of the asteroid 243 Ida from Galileo show an irregular object measuring 56-kilometers by 24 kilometers by 21 kilometers. Its surface is rich in geologic features, including systems of grooves, blocks, chutes, albedo features, crater chains, and a full range of crater morphologies. The largest blocks may be distributed nonuniformly across the surface; lineaments and dark-floored craters also have preferential locations. Ida is interpreted to have a substantial regolith. The high crater density and size-frequency distribution (–3 differential power-law index) indicate a surface in equilibrium with saturated cratering. A minimum model crater age for Ida—and therefore for the Koronis family to which Ida belongs—is estimated at 1 billion years, older than expected.


Science | 1991

Images from Galileo of the Venus Cloud Deck

Michael Belton; Peter J. Gierasch; Michael D. Smith; Paul Helfenstein; Paul J. Schinder; James B. Pollack; Kathy A. Rages; Andrew P. Ingersoll; Kenneth P. Klaasen; Joseph Veverka; Clifford D. Anger; Michael H. Carr; Clark R. Chapman; Merton E. Davies; Fraser P. Fanale; Ronald Greeley; Richard Greenberg; James W. Head; David Morrison; Gerhard Neukum; Carl B. Pilcher

Images of Venus taken at 418 (violet) and 986 [near-infrared (NIR)] nanometers show that the morphology and motions of large-scale features change with depth in the cloud deck. Poleward meridional velocities, seen in both spectral regions, are much reduced in the NIR In the south polar region the markings in the two wavelength bands are strongly anticorrelated. The images follow the changing state of the upper cloud layer downwind of the subsolar point, and the zonal flow field shows a longitudinal periodicity that may be coupled to the formation of large-scale planetary waves. No optical lightning was detected.


Science | 1992

Lunar impact basins and crustal heterogeneity - New western limb and far side data from Galileo

Michael Belton; James W. Head; Carle M. Pieters; Ronald Greeley; Alfred S. McEwen; Gerhard Neukum; Kenneth P. Klaasen; Clifford D. Anger; Michael H. Carr; Clark R. Chapman; Merton E. Davies; Fraser P. Fanale; Peter J. Gierasch; Richard Greenberg; Andrew P. Ingersoll; Torrence V. Johnson; Brian Paczkowski; Carl B. Pilcher; Joseph Veverka

Multispectral images of the lunar western limb and far side obtained from Galileo reveal the compositional nature of several prominent lunar features and provide new information on lunar evolution. The data reveal that the ejecta from the Orientale impact basin (900 kilometers in diameter) lying outside the Cordillera Mountains was excavated from the crust, not the mantle, and covers pre-Orientale terrain that consisted of both highland materials and relatively large expanses of ancient mare basalts. The inside of the far side South Pole—Aitken basin (>2000 kilometers in diameter) has low albedo, red color, and a relatively high abundance of iron- and magnesium-rich materials. These features suggest that the impact may have penetrated into the deep crust or lunar mantle or that the basin contains ancient mare basalts that were later covered by highlands ejecta.


Space Science Reviews | 1992

The Galileo Solid-State Imaging experiment

Michael Belton; Kenneth P. Klaasen; Maurice C. Clary; James L. Anderson; Clifford D. Anger; Michael H. Carr; Clark R. Chapman; Merton E. Davies; Ronald Greeley; Donald L. Anderson; Lawrence K. Bolef; Timothy E. Townsend; Richard Greenberg; James W. Head; G. Neukum; Carl B. Pilcher; Joseph Veverka; Peter J. Gierasch; Fraser P. Fanale; Andrew P. Ingersoll; Harold Masursky; David R. Morrison; James B. Pollack

The Solid State Imaging (SSI) experiment on the Galileo Orbiter spacecraft utilizes a high-resolution (1500 mm focal length) television camera with an 800 × 800 pixel virtual-phase, charge-coupled detector. It is designed to return images of Jupiter and its satellites that are characterized by a combination of sensitivity levels, spatial resolution, geometric fiedelity, and spectral range unmatched by imaging data obtained previously. The spectral range extends from approximately 375 to 1100 nm and only in the near ultra-violet region (∼ 350 nm) is the spectral coverage reduced from previous missions. The camera is approximately 100 times more sensitive than those used in the Voyager mission, and, because of the nature of the satellite encounters, will produce images with approximately 100 times the ground resolution (i.e., ∼ 50 m lp-1) on the Galilean satellites. We describe aspects of the detector including its sensitivity to energetic particle radiation and how the requirements for a large full-well capacity and long-term stability in operating voltages led to the choice of the virtual phase chip. The F/8.5 camera system can reach point sources of V(mag) ∼ 11 with S/N ∼ 10 and extended sources with surface brightness as low as 20 kR in its highest gain state and longest exposure mode. We describe the performance of the system as determined by ground calibration and the improvements that have been made to the telescope (same basic catadioptric design that was used in Mariner 10 and the Voyager high-resolution cameras) to reduce the scattered light reaching the detector. The images are linearly digitized 8-bits deep and, after flat-fielding, are cosmetically clean. Information ‘preserving’ and ‘non-preserving’ on-board data compression capabilities are outlined. A special “summation” mode, designed for use deep in the Jovian radiation belts, near Io, is also described. The detector is ‘preflashed’ before each exposure to ensure the photometric linearity. The dynamic range is spread over 3 gain states and an exposure range from 4.17 ms to 51.2 s. A low-level of radial, third-order, geometric distortion has been measured in the raw images that is entirely due to the optical design. The distortion is of the pincushion type and amounts to about 1.2 pixels in the corners of the images. It is expected to be very stable.We discuss the measurement objectives of the SSI experiment in the Jupiter system and emphasize their relationships to those of other experiments in the Galileo project. We outline objectives for Jupiter atmospheric science, noting the relationship of SSI data to that to be returned by experiments on the atmospheric entry Probe. We also outline SSI objectives for satellite surfaces, ring structure, and ‘darkside’ (e.g., aurorae, lightning, etc.) experiments. Proposed cruise measurement objectives that relate to encounters at Venus, Moon, Earth, Gaspra, and, possibly, Ida are also briefly outlined. The article concludes with a description of a ‘fully distributed’ data analysis system (HIIPS) that SSI team members intend to use at their home institutions. We also list the nature of systematic data products that will become available to the scientific community. Finally, we append a short ‘historical’ note outlining the responsibilities and roles of institutions and individuals that have been involved in the 14 year development of the SSI experiment so far.


Science | 1994

Galileo Multispectral Imaging of the North Polar and Eastern Limb Regions of the Moon

M. J. S. Belton; Ronald Greeley; Richard Greenberg; Alfred S. McEwen; Kenneth P. Klaasen; James W. Head; Carle M. Pieters; G. Neukum; Clark R. Chapman; P. E. Geissler; C. Heffernan; H. H. Breneman; Clifford D. Anger; Michael H. Carr; Merton E. Davies; F. P. Fanale; Peter J. Gierasch; A. P. Ingersoll; Torrence V. Johnson; Carl B. Pilcher; W. R. Thompson; J. Veverka; Carl Sagan

Multispectral images obtained during the Galileo probes second encounter with the moon reveal the compositional nature of the north polar regions and the northeastern limb. Mare deposits in these regions are found to be primarily low to medium titanium lavas and, as on the western limb, show only slight spectral heterogeneity. The northern light plains are found to have the spectral characteristics of highlands materials, show little evidence for the presence of cryptomaria, and were most likely emplaced by impact processes regardless of their age.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 1973

Spectroscopy of Jupiter: 3200 to 11,200 Å

Carl B. Pilcher; Ronald G. Prinn; Thomas B. McCord

Abstract We have measured the absolute reflectivities of four areas on Jupiter between 3200 and 11,200 A with spectral resolution of 5 A (λ 6000 A). The values of the isotropic single-scattering albedos derived are considerably higher than those derived from photometric data of other investigators. These higher values allow a fit to be obtained, using existing atmospheric models, to the observed equivalent widths of the H2 3–0 quadrupole lines. The equivalent widths of several Jovian methane and ammonia absorptions are presented and discussed. The values of Chamberlains w and q parameters for the CH4 6190 A band are found to be 1.2±0.5 and 240±100, respectively.

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Ronald Greeley

Arizona State University

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Clark R. Chapman

Southwest Research Institute

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Michael H. Carr

United States Geological Survey

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G. Neukum

Free University of Berlin

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Kenneth P. Klaasen

California Institute of Technology

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Michael Belton

Kitt Peak National Observatory

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