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Featured researches published by David S. Choi.


Icarus | 2007

Velocity and vorticity measurements of Jupiter's Great Red Spot using automated cloud feature tracking

David S. Choi; Donald J. Banfield; Peter J. Gierasch

We have produced mosaics of the Great Red Spot (GRS) using images taken by the Galileo spacecraft in May 2000, and have measured the winds of the GRS using an automated algorithm that does not require manual cloud tracking. Our technique yields a high-density, regular grid of wind velocity vectors that is advantageous over a limited number of scattered wind vectors that result from manual cloud tracking. The highvelocity collar of the GRS is clearly seen from our velocity vector map, and highest wind velocities are measured to be around 170 m s −1 . The high resolution of the mosaics has also enabled us to map turbulent eddies inside the chaotic central region of the GRS, similar to those mapped by Sada et al. [Sada, P.V., Beebe, R.F., Conrath, B.J., 1996. Icarus 119, 311–335]. Using the wind velocity measurements, we computed particle trajectories around the GRS as well as maps of relative and absolute vorticities. We have discovered a narrow ring of cyclonic vorticity that surrounds the main anti-cyclonic high-velocity collar. This narrow ring appears to correspond to a ring surrounding the GRS that is bright in 5 µm [Terrile, R.J., Beebe, R.F., 1979. Science 204, 948–951]. It appears that this cyclonic ring is not a transient feature of the GRS, as we have discovered it in a re-analysis of Galileo data taken in 1996 first analyzed by Vasavada et al. [Vasavada, A.R., and 13 colleagues, 1998. Icarus 135, 265–275]. We also calculate how absolute vorticity changes as a function of latitude along a trajectory around the GRS and compare these measurements to similar ones performed by Dowling and Ingersoll [Dowling, T.E., Ingersoll, A.P., 1988. J. Atmos. Sci. 45, 1380–1396] using Voyager data. We show no dramatic evolution in the structure of the GRS since the Voyager era except for additional evidence for a counter-rotating GRS core, an increase in velocity in the main velocity collar, and an overall decrease in the length of the GRS.


Icarus | 2013

Meteorology of Jupiter's Equatorial Hot Spots and Plumes from Cassini

David S. Choi; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Amy A. Simon-Miller

We present an updated analysis of Jupiter’s equatorial meteorology from Cassini observations. For two months preceding the spacecraft’s closest approach, the Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) onboard regularly imaged the atmosphere. We created time-lapse movies from this period in order to analyze the dynamics of equatorial hot spots and their interactions with adjacent latitudes. Hot spots are relatively cloud-free regions that emit strongly at 5 lm; improved knowledge of these features is crucial for fully understanding Galileo probe measurements taken during its descent through one. Hot spots are quasistable, rectangular dark areas on visible-wavelength images, with defined eastern edges that sharply contrast with surrounding clouds, but diffuse western edges serving as nebulous boundaries with adjacent equatorial plumes. Hot spots exhibit significant variations in size and shape over timescales of days and weeks. Some of these changes correspond with passing vortex systems from adjacent latitudes interacting with hot spots. Strong anticyclonic gyres present to the south and southeast of the dark areas appear to circulate into hot spots. Impressive, bright white plumes occupy spaces in between hot spots. Compact cirrus-like ‘scooter’ clouds flow rapidly through the plumes before disappearing within the dark areas. These clouds travel at 150–200 m s 1 , much faster than the 100 m s 1 hot spot and plume drift speed. This raises the possibility that the scooter clouds may be more illustrative of the actual jet stream speed at these latitudes. Most previously published zonal wind profiles represent the drift speed of the hot spots at their latitude from pattern matching of the entire longitudinal image strip. If a downward branch of an equatorially-trapped Rossby wave controls the overall appearance of hot spots, however, the westward phase velocity of the wave leads to underestimates of the true jet stream speed.


Physics of Fluids | 2012

Flow structures of Jupiter's Great Red Spot extracted by using optical flow method

Tianshu Liu; Bo Wang; David S. Choi

The flow structures of Jupiters Great Red Spot (GRS) are studied based on a high-resolution velocity field extracted from the Galileo 1996 cloud images of the GRS by using the physics-based optical flow method. The mean transverse velocity profile across the anti-cyclonic near-elliptical collar of the GRS is obtained. The flow structures in the relatively quiescent inner region enclosed by the high-speed collar are revealed at a coarse-grained level. The cyclonic source node in the inner region is identified that is directly associated with the observed cyclonic rotation near the center of the GRS, and its significance in the maintenance of the GRS is explored by using a topological constraint.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Cloud features and zonal wind measurements of Saturn's atmosphere as observed by Cassini/VIMS

David S. Choi; Robert H. Brown


Icarus | 2011

Power spectral analysis of Jupiter's clouds and kinetic energy from Cassini

David S. Choi


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Measurements of Martian dust devil winds with HiRISE

David S. Choi; Colin M. Dundas


Icarus | 2012

Longitudinal Variation and Waves in Jupiter's South Equatorial Wind Jet

Amy A. Simon-Miller; John H. Rogers; Peter J. Gierasch; David S. Choi; Michael E. D. Allison; Gianluigi Adamoli; Hans-Joerg Mettig


Icarus | 2010

The evolving flow of Jupiter’s White Ovals and adjacent cyclones

David S. Choi; Ashwin R. Vasavada


Acta Astronautica | 2014

Observations of wind direction by automated analysis of images from Mars and the MSL rover

Raymond Francis; John E. Moores; Kenneth A. McIsaac; David S. Choi; Gordon R. Osinski


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Suppression of the Rhines effect and the location of vortices on Saturn

A. B. Penny; David S. Choi

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Ashwin R. Vasavada

California Institute of Technology

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Colin M. Dundas

United States Geological Survey

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John H. Rogers

British Astronomical Association

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Michael E. D. Allison

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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Tianshu Liu

Western Michigan University

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