Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Daniel M. Applin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Daniel M. Applin.


Nature | 2015

Sublimation in bright spots on (1) Ceres.

A. Nathues; M. Hoffmann; M. Schaefer; L. Le Corre; Vishnu Reddy; Thomas Platz; Edward A. Cloutis; Ulrich R. Christensen; T. Kneissl; J.-Y. Li; Kurt Mengel; N. Schmedemann; T. Schaefer; C. T. Russell; Daniel M. Applin; D.L. Buczkowski; M. R. M. Izawa; H. U. Keller; David P. O’Brien; Carle M. Pieters; C.A. Raymond; Joachim Ripken; Paul M. Schenk; Britney E. Schmidt; H. Sierks; Mark V. Sykes; Guneshwar Thangjam; Jean-Baptiste Vincent

The dwarf planet (1) Ceres, the largest object in the main asteroid belt with a mean diameter of about 950 kilometres, is located at a mean distance from the Sun of about 2.8 astronomical units (one astronomical unit is the Earth–Sun distance). Thermal evolution models suggest that it is a differentiated body with potential geological activity. Unlike on the icy satellites of Jupiter and Saturn, where tidal forces are responsible for spewing briny water into space, no tidal forces are acting on Ceres. In the absence of such forces, most objects in the main asteroid belt are expected to be geologically inert. The recent discovery of water vapour absorption near Ceres and previous detection of bound water and OH near and on Ceres (refs 5, 6, 7) have raised interest in the possible presence of surface ice. Here we report the presence of localized bright areas on Ceres from an orbiting imager. These unusual areas are consistent with hydrated magnesium sulfates mixed with dark background material, although other compositions are possible. Of particular interest is a bright pit on the floor of crater Occator that exhibits probable sublimation of water ice, producing haze clouds inside the crater that appear and disappear with a diurnal rhythm. Slow-moving condensed-ice or dust particles may explain this haze. We conclude that Ceres must have accreted material from beyond the ‘snow line’, which is the distance from the Sun at which water molecules condense.


Geobiology | 2014

A mineralogical characterization of biogenic calcium carbonates precipitated by heterotrophic bacteria isolated from cryophilic polar regions

Jennifer Ronholm; Dirk Schumann; H. M. Sapers; M. R. M. Izawa; Daniel M. Applin; B. Berg; Paul Mann; Hojatollah Vali; Roberta L. Flemming; Edward A. Cloutis; Lyle G. Whyte

Precipitation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3(s) ) can be driven by microbial activity. Here, a systematic approach is used to identify the morphological and mineralogical characteristics of CaCO3(s) precipitated during the heterotrophic growth of micro-organisms isolated from polar environments. Focus was placed on establishing mineralogical features that are common in bioliths formed during heterotrophic activity, while in parallel identifying features that are specific to bioliths precipitated by certain microbial phylotypes. Twenty microbial isolates that precipitated macroscopic CaCO3(s) when grown on B4 media supplemented with calcium acetate or calcium citrate were identified. A multimethod approach, including scanning electron microscopy, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and micro-X-ray diffraction (μ-XRD), was used to characterize CaCO3(s) precipitates. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy showed that complete CaCO3(s) crystal encrustation of Arthrobacter sp. cells was common, while encrustation of Rhodococcus sp. cells did not occur. Several euhedral and anhedral mineral formations including disphenoid-like epitaxial plates, rhomboid-like aggregates with epitaxial rhombs, and spherulite aggregates were observed. While phylotype could not be linked to specific mineral formations, isolates tended to precipitate either euhedral or anhedral minerals, but not both. Three anhydrous CaCO3(s) polymorphs (calcite, aragonite, and vaterite) were identified by μ-XRD, and calcite and aragonite were also identified based on TEM lattice-fringe d value measurements. The presence of certain polymorphs was not indicative of biogenic origin, although several mineralogical features such as crystal-encrusted bacterial cells, or casts of bacterial cells embedded in mesocrystals are an indication of biogenic origin. In addition, some features such as the formation of vaterite and bacterial entombment appear to be linked to certain phylotypes. Identifying phylotypes consistent with certain mineralogical features is the first step toward discovering a link between these crystal features and the precise underlying molecular biology of the organism precipitating them.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2014

The persistence of a chlorophyll spectral biosignature from Martian evaporite and spring analogues under Mars-like conditions

J. M. Stromberg; Daniel M. Applin; Edward A. Cloutis; Melissa S. Rice; G. M. Berard; Paul Mann

Spring and evaporite deposits are considered two of the most promising environments for past habitability on Mars and preservation of biosignatures. Manitoba, Canada hosts the East German Creek (EGC) hypersaline spring complex, and the post impact evaporite gypsum beds of the Lake St. Martin (LSM) impact. The EGC complex has microbial mats, sediments, algae and biofabrics, while endolithic communities are ubiquitous in the LSM gypsum beds. These communities are spectrally detectable based largely on the presence of a chlorophyll absorption band at 670 nm; however, the robustness of this feature under Martian surface conditions was unclear. Biological and biology-bearing samples fromEGC and LSM were exposed to conditions similar to the surface of present day Mars (high UV flux, 100 mbar, anoxic, CO2 rich) for up to 44 days, and preservation of the 670 nm chlorophyll feature and chlorophyll red-edge was observed. A decrease in band depth of the 670 nm band ranging from*16 to 80% resulted, with correlations seen in the degree of preservation and the spatial proximity of samples to the spring mound and mineral shielding effects. The spectra were deconvolved to Mars Exploration Rover (MER) Pancam and Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) Mastcam science filter bandpasses to investigate the detectability of the 670 nm feature and to compare with common mineral features. The red-edge and 670 nm feature associated with chlorophyll can be distinguished from the spectra of minerals with features below *1000 nm, such as hematite and jarosite. However, distinguishing goethite from samples with the chlorophyll feature is more problematic, and quantitative interpretation using band depth data makes little distinction between iron oxyhydroxides and the 670 nm chlorophyll feature. The chlorophyll spectral feature is observable in both Pancam andMastcam, andwepropose thatof theproposed EXOMARS Pancam filters, thePHYLL filteris best suited for its detection.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2014

Gypsum-hosted endolithic communities of the Lake St. Martin impact structure, Manitoba, Canada: spectroscopic detectability and implications for Mars

T. Rhind; Jennifer Ronholm; B. Berg; Paul Mann; Daniel M. Applin; J. M. Stromberg; R. Sharma; Lyle G. Whyte; Edward A. Cloutis

There is increasing evidence that Mars may have once been a habitable environment. Gypsum is targeted in the search for Martian biosignatures because it can host extensive cryptoendolithic communities in extreme terrestrial environments and is widespread on Mars. In this study the viability of using different spectroscopy-based techniques to identify the presence of gypsum endolithic communities was investigated by analysing various cryptoendoliths collected from the Lake St. Martin impact crater (LSM), a Mars analogue site found in Manitoba, Canada. Concurrently, the cryptoendolithic microbial community structure present was also analysed to aid in assigning spectroscopic features to microbial community members. Twomain morphologies of endolithic communities were collected from gypsum deposits at LSM: true cryptoendolithic communities and annular deposits on partially buried boulders and cobbles <1 cm below the soil surface. Endolithic communities were found to be visibly present only in gypsum with a high degree of translucency and could occur as deep as 3 cm below the exterior surface. The bacterial community was dominated by a phylum (Chloroflexi) that has not been previously observed in gypsum endoliths. The exterior surfaces of gypsum boulders and cobbles are devoid of spectroscopic features attributable to organic molecules and detectable by reflectance, Raman, or ultraviolet-induced fluorescence spectroscopies. However, exposed interior surfaces show unique endolithic signatures detectable by each spectroscopic technique. This indicates that cryptoendolithic communities can be detected via spectroscopy-based techniques, provided they are either partially or fully exposed and enough photon–target interactions occur to enable detection. Received 28 April 2014, accepted 7 August 2014


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2018

Spectral properties and geology of bright and dark material on dwarf planet Ceres

Guneshwar Thangjam; A. Nathues; Thomas Platz; M. Hoffmann; Edward A. Cloutis; Kurt Mengel; M. R. M. Izawa; Daniel M. Applin

Variations and spatial distributions of bright and dark material on dwarf planet Ceres play a key role for the understanding of the processes that have led to its present surface composition. We define limits for bright and dark material in order to distinguish them consistently, based on the reflectance with respect to the average surface using Dawn Framing Camera data. A systematic classification of four types of bright material is presented based on their spectral properties, composition, spatial distribution, and association with specific geomorphological features. We found obvious correlations of reflectance with spectral shape (slopes) and age; however, this is not unique throughout the bright spots. Although impact features show generally more extreme reflectance variations, several areas can only be understood in terms of inhomogeneous distribution of composition as inferred from Dawn Visible and Infrared Spectrometer data. Additional materials with anomalous composition and spectral properties are rare. The identification of the origin of the dark, and particularly the darkest, material remains to be explored. The spectral properties and the morphology of the dark sites suggest an endogenic origin, but it is not clear whether they are more or less primitive surficial exposures or excavated sub-surface but localized material. The reflectance, spectral properties, inferred composition, and geologic context collectively suggest that the bright and dark materials tend to gradually change towards the average surface over time. This could be because of multiple processes, i.e., impact gardening/space weathering, and lateral mixing, including thermal and aqueous alteration, accompanied with changes in composition and physical properties such as grain size, surface temperature, porosity (compaction).


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

DETECTION OF ROTATIONAL SPECTRAL VARIATION ON THE M-TYPE ASTEROID (16) PSYCHE

Juan A. Sanchez; Vishnu Reddy; Michael K. Shepard; Cristina A. Thomas; Edward A. Cloutis; Driss Takir; Albert Rudolph Conrad; Cain Kiddell; Daniel M. Applin

NASA [NNX13AP27G, NNX12AG12G, NNX11AN84G]; IRTF TAC; National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX12AF24G, NNX13AQ46G]; Canada Foundation for Innovation; Manitoba Research Innovations Fund; Canadian Space Agency; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; University of Winnipeg


Computers & Geosciences | 2017

Fitting the curve in Excel

Michael A. McCraig; Gordon R. Osinski; Edward A. Cloutis; Roberta L. Flemming; M. R. M. Izawa; Vishnu Reddy; Sherry K. Fieber-Beyer; Loredana Pompilio; Freek D. van der Meer; Jeffrey A. Berger; Michael S. Bramble; Daniel M. Applin

Spectroscopy in planetary science often provides the only information regarding the compositional and mineralogical make up of planetary surfaces. The methods employed when curve fitting and modelling spectra can be confusing and difficult to visualize and comprehend. Researchers who are new to working with spectra may find inadequate help or documentation in the scientific literature or in the software packages available for curve fitting. This problem also extends to the parameterization of spectra and the dissemination of derived metrics. Often, when derived metrics are reported, such as band centres, the discussion of exactly how the metrics were derived, or if there was any systematic curve fitting performed, is not included. Herein we provide both recommendations and methods for curve fitting and explanations of the terms and methods used. Techniques to curve fit spectral data of various types are demonstrated using simple-to-understand mathematics and equations written to be used in Microsoft Excel software, free of macros, in a cut-and-paste fashion that allows one to curve fit spectra in a reasonably user-friendly manner. The procedures use empirical curve fitting, include visualizations, and ameliorates many of the unknowns one may encounter when using black-box commercial software. The provided framework is a comprehensive record of the curve fitting parameters used, the derived metrics, and is intended to be an example of a format for dissemination when curve fitting data. An introduction to empirical curve fitting UVvisNIR, and other spectra.An introduction to semi-automated methods for Gaussian Fitting.An introduction to common data analysis techniques used by reflectance spectroscopists.Curve fitting using Microsoft Excel.


Planetary and Space Science | 2016

FC colour images of dwarf planet Ceres reveal a complicated geological history

A. Nathues; M. Hoffmann; Thomas Platz; Guneshwar Thangjam; Edward A. Cloutis; Vishnu Reddy; L. Le Corre; J.-Y. Li; Kurt Mengel; Andrew Scott Rivkin; Daniel M. Applin; M. Schaefer; Ulrich R. Christensen; H. Sierks; Joachim Ripken; Britney E. Schmidt; Harald Hiesinger; Mark V. Sykes; Hanna G. Sizemore; Frank Preusker; C. T. Russell


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2015

Oxalate minerals on Mars

Daniel M. Applin; M. R. M. Izawa; Edward A. Cloutis; Doug Goltz; Jeffrey R. Johnson


Icarus | 2016

Reflectance spectroscopy of low atomic weight and Na-rich minerals: Borates, hydroxides, nitrates, nitrites, and peroxides

Edward A. Cloutis; B. Berg; Paul Mann; Daniel M. Applin

Collaboration


Dive into the Daniel M. Applin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paul Mann

University of Winnipeg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kurt Mengel

Clausthal University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. Berg

University of Winnipeg

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge