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Dive into the research topics where Carl J. Hansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl J. Hansen.


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.


Science | 2007

A Closer Look at Water-Related Geologic Activity on Mars

Alfred S. McEwen; Carl J. Hansen; W. A. Delamere; Eric M. Eliason; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; Laszlo P. Keszthelyi; V. C. Gulick; R. L. Kirk; Michael T. Mellon; John A. Grant; Nicolas Thomas; Catherine M. Weitz; Steven W. Squyres; Nathan T. Bridges; Scott L. Murchie; F. P. Seelos; Kimberly D. Seelos; Chris H. Okubo; Moses Pollen Milazzo; Livio L. Tornabene; Windy L. Jaeger; Shane Byrne; Patrick Russell; J. L. Griffes; Sara Martínez-Alonso; A. Davatzes; Frank C. Chuang; B. J. Thomson; Kathryn Elspeth Fishbaugh; Colin M. Dundas

Water has supposedly marked the surface of Mars and produced characteristic landforms. To understand the history of water on Mars, we take a close look at key locations with the High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, reaching fine spatial scales of 25 to 32 centimeters per pixel. Boulders ranging up to ∼2 meters in diameter are ubiquitous in the middle to high latitudes, which include deposits previously interpreted as finegrained ocean sediments or dusty snow. Bright gully deposits identify six locations with very recent activity, but these lie on steep (20° to 35°) slopes where dry mass wasting could occur. Thus, we cannot confirm the reality of ancient oceans or water in active gullies but do see evidence of fluvial modification of geologically recent mid-latitude gullies and equatorial impact craters.


Science | 2011

Seasonal Erosion and Restoration of Mars’ Northern Polar Dunes

Carl J. Hansen; Mary C. Bourke; Nathan T. Bridges; Shane Byrne; C. M. Colon; Serina Diniega; Colin M. Dundas; K. E. Herkenhoff; Alfred S. McEwen; Michael T. Mellon; G. Portyankina; Nicolas Thomas

High-resolution images of Mars show active sand transport on northern polar dunes. Despite radically different environmental conditions, terrestrial and martian dunes bear a strong resemblance, indicating that the basic processes of saltation and grainfall (sand avalanching down the dune slipface) operate on both worlds. Here, we show that martian dunes are subject to an additional modification process not found on Earth: springtime sublimation of Mars’ CO2 seasonal polar caps. Numerous dunes in Mars’ north polar region have experienced morphological changes within a Mars year, detected in images acquired by the High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Dunes show new alcoves, gullies, and dune apron extension. This is followed by remobilization of the fresh deposits by the wind, forming ripples and erasing gullies. The widespread nature of these rapid changes, and the pristine appearance of most dunes in the area, implicates active sand transport in the vast polar erg in Mars’ current climate.


Nature | 2007

Surface composition of Hyperion

Dale P. Cruikshank; J. B. Dalton; C.M. Dalle Ore; James Monie Bauer; K. Stephan; G. Filacchione; Amanda R. Hendrix; Carl J. Hansen; Angioletta Coradini; P. Cerroni; F. Tosi; F. Capaccioni; R. Jaumann; Bonnie J. Buratti; R.N. Clark; Robert H. Brown; Robert M. Nelson; T. B. McCord; Kevin H. Baines; P. D. Nicholson; Christophe Sotin; Allan W. Meyer; G. Bellucci; M. Combes; J.-P. Bibring; Yves Langevin; B. Sicardy; Dennis L. Matson; Vittorio Formisano; P. Drossart

Hyperion, Saturn’s eighth largest icy satellite, is a body of irregular shape in a state of chaotic rotation. The surface is segregated into two distinct units. A spatially dominant high-albedo unit having the strong signature of H2O ice contrasts with a unit that is about a factor of four lower in albedo and is found mostly in the bottoms of cup-like craters. Here we report observations of Hyperion’s surface in the ultraviolet and near-infrared spectral regions with two optical remote sensing instruments on the Cassini spacecraft at closest approach during a fly-by on 25–26 September 2005. The close fly-by afforded us the opportunity to obtain separate reflectance spectra of the high- and low-albedo surface components. The low-albedo material has spectral similarities and compositional signatures that link it with the surface of Phoebe and a hemisphere-wide superficial coating on Iapetus.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

The composition and structure of the Enceladus plume

Carl J. Hansen; Donald E. Shemansky; Larry W. Esposito; A. I. F. Stewart; B. R. Lewis; Joshua E. Colwell; Amanda R. Hendrix; Robert A. West; J. H. Waite; B Teolis; B. A. Magee


Archive | 2005

MRO's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE)

Alfred S. McEwen; Eric M. Eliason; James W. Bergstrom; Nathan T. Bridges; Carl J. Hansen; W. Alan Delamere; Joshua A. Grant; V. C. Gulick; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; Laszlo P. Keszthelyi; Randolph L. Kirk; Michael T. Mellon; Steven W. Squyres; Nigel Thomas; Catherine M. Weitz


Archive | 2007

Observations of Europa's Tenuous Atmosphere

Melissa Ann McGrath; Carl J. Hansen; Amanda R. Hendrix; Kurt D. Retherford


Archive | 2010

Planet-Wide Sand Movement on Mars as Documented by the HiRISE Camera

Nathan T. Bridges; Mary C. Bourke; C. M. Colon; Serina Diniega; P. E. Geissler; Matthew P. Golombek; Carl J. Hansen; Sarah S. Mattson; Alfred S. McEwen; N. W. Stantzos


Archive | 2007

High Resolution Observations of Korolev Crater and Mrs. Chippy's Ring During Summer by CRISM and HiRISE

Alexander Brown; Alex Byrne; Ted L. Roush; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; James Bishop; Carl J. Hansen; Robert O. Green; Phillip St. J. Russell; Alfred S. McEwen; Scott L. Murchie


Archive | 2009

Seasonal Frost at the Phoenix Landing Site

Mindi Lea Searls; Michael T. Mellon; Selby C. Cull; Carl J. Hansen

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Amanda R. Hendrix

Southwest Research Institute

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Donald E. Shemansky

University of Southern California

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Joshua E. Colwell

University of Central Florida

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Robert A. West

California Institute of Technology

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Larry W. Esposito

University of Colorado Boulder

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Michael T. Mellon

Southwest Research Institute

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William E. McClintock

University of Colorado Boulder

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