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Dive into the research topics where Doug Hemingway is active.

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Featured researches published by Doug Hemingway.


Science | 2014

The Gravity Field and Interior Structure of Enceladus

L. Iess; David J. Stevenson; M. Parisi; Doug Hemingway; R. A. Jacobson; Jonathan I. Lunine; Francis Nimmo; J. W. Armstrong; Sami W. Asmar; M. Ducci; Paolo Tortora

Inside Enceladus Saturns moon Enceladus has often been the focus of flybys of the Cassini spacecraft. Although small—Enceladus is roughly 10 times smaller than Saturns largest moon, Titan—Enceladus has shown hints of having a complex internal structure rich in liquid water. Iess et al. (p. 78) used long-range data collected by the Cassini spacecraft to construct a gravity model of Enceladus. The resulting gravity field indicates the presence of a large mass anomaly at its south pole. Calculations of the moment of inertia and hydrostatic equilibrium from the gravity data suggest the presence of a large, regional subsurface ocean 30 to 40 km deep. The saturnian moon is differentiated and likely hosts a regional subsurface sea at its southern pole. The small and active Saturnian moon Enceladus is one of the primary targets of the Cassini mission. We determined the quadrupole gravity field of Enceladus and its hemispherical asymmetry using Doppler data from three spacecraft flybys. Our results indicate the presence of a negative mass anomaly in the south-polar region, largely compensated by a positive subsurface anomaly compatible with the presence of a regional subsurface sea at depths of 30 to 40 kilometers and extending up to south latitudes of about 50°. The estimated values for the largest quadrupole harmonic coefficients (106J2 = 5435.2 ± 34.9, 106C22 = 1549.8 ± 15.6, 1σ) and their ratio (J2/C22 = 3.51 ± 0.05) indicate that the body deviates mildly from hydrostatic equilibrium. The moment of inertia is around 0.335MR2, where M is the mass and R is the radius, suggesting a differentiated body with a low-density core.


Nature | 2013

A rigid and weathered ice shell on Titan

Doug Hemingway; Francis Nimmo; Howard A. Zebker; L. Iess

Several lines of evidence suggest that Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, has a global subsurface ocean beneath an outer ice shell 50 to 200 kilometres thick. If convection is occurring, the rigid portion of the shell is expected to be thin; similarly, a weak, isostatically compensated shell has been proposed to explain the observed topography. Here we report a strong inverse correlation between gravity and topography at long wavelengths that are not dominated by tides and rotation. We argue that negative gravity anomalies (mass deficits) produced by crustal thickening at the base of the ice shell overwhelm positive gravity anomalies (mass excesses) produced by the small surface topography, giving rise to this inverse correlation. We show that this situation requires a substantially rigid ice shell with an elastic thickness exceeding 40 kilometres, and hundreds of metres of surface erosion and deposition, consistent with recent estimates from local features. Our results are therefore not compatible with a geologically active, low-rigidity ice shell. After extrapolating to wavelengths that are controlled by tides and rotation, we suggest that Titan’s moment of inertia may be even higher (that is, Titan may be even less centrally condensed) than is currently thought.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Lunar magnetic field measurements with a cubesat

Ian Garrick-Bethell; Robert P. Lin; Hugo Sanchez; Belgacem A. Jaroux; M. Bester; P. Brown; Daniel Cosgrove; Michele K. Dougherty; J. S. Halekas; Doug Hemingway; Paulo C. Lozano; Francois Martel; Caleb W. Whitlock

We have developed a mission concept that uses 3-unit cubesats to perform new measurements of lunar magnetic fields, less than 100 meters above the Moon’s surface. The mission calls for sending the cubesats on impact trajectories to strongly magnetic regions on the surface, and transmitting measurements in real-time to a nearby spacecraft, or directly to the Earth, up until milliseconds before impact. The cubesats and their instruments are partly based on the NSF-funded CINEMA cubesat now in Earth orbit. Two methods of reaching the Moon as a secondary payload are discussed: 1) After launching into geostationary transfer orbit with a communication satellite, a small mother-ship travels into lunar orbit and releases the cubesats on impact trajectories, and 2) The cubesats travel to the Moon using their own propulsion after release into geosynchronous orbit. This latter version would also enable other near-Earth missions, such as constellations for studying magnetospheric processes, and observations of close-approaching asteroids.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Magnetic field direction and lunar swirl morphology: Insights from Airy and Reiner Gamma: MAGNETIC FIELD DIRECTION AT LUNAR SWIRLS

Doug Hemingway; Ian Garrick-Bethell

[1] Many of the Moon’s crustal magnetic anomalies are accompanied by high albedo features known as swirls. A leading hypothesis suggests that swirls are formed where crustal magnetic anomalies, acting as mini magnetospheres, shield portions of the surface from the darkening effects of solar wind ion bombardment, thereby leaving patches that appear bright compared with their surroundings. If this hypothesis is correct, then magnetic field direction should influence swirl morphology. Using Lunar Prospector magnetometer data and Clementine reflectance mosaics, we find evidence that bright regions correspond with dominantly horizontal magnetic fields at Reiner Gamma and that vertical magnetic fields are associated with the intraswirl dark lane at Airy. We use a genetic search algorithm to model the distributions of magnetic source material at both anomalies, and we show that source models constrained by the observed albedo pattern (i.e., strongly horizontal surface fields in bright areas, vertical surface fields in dark lanes) produce fields that are consistent with the Lunar Prospector magnetometer measurements. These findings support the solar wind deflection hypothesis and may help to explain not only the general form of swirls, but also the finer aspects of their morphology. Our source models may also be used to make quantitative predictions of the near surface magnetic field, which must ultimately be tested with very low altitude spacecraft measurements. If our predictions are correct, our models could have implications for the structure of the underlying magnetic material and the nature of the magnetizing field. Citation: Hemingway, D., and I. Garrick-Bethell (2012), Magnetic field direction and lunar swirl morphology: Insights from Airy and Reiner Gamma, J. Geophys. Res., 117, E10012, doi:10.1029/2012JE004165.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Magnetic field direction and lunar swirl morphology: Insights from Airy and Reiner Gamma

Doug Hemingway; Ian Garrick-Bethell


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Tidal Disruption of Phobos as the Cause of Surface Fractures

Terry Anthony Hurford; Erik Asphaug; Joseph Nicholas Spitale; Doug Hemingway; Alyssa Rose Rhoden; Wade G. Henning; Bruce G. Bills; Simon A. Kattenhorn; M. Walker


Icarus | 2016

Solar wind interaction with the Reiner Gamma crustal magnetic anomaly: Connecting source magnetization to surface weathering

A. R. Poppe; Shahab Fatemi; Ian Garrick-Bethell; Doug Hemingway; Mats Holmström


Icarus | 2016

Rhea gravity field and interior modeling from Cassini data analysis

Paolo Tortora; Marco Zannoni; Doug Hemingway; Francis Nimmo; Robert A. Jacobson; L. Iess; Marzia Parisi


Icarus | 2017

Magnetization in the South Pole Aitken basin: Implications for the lunar dynamo and true polar wander

Michael Nayak; Doug Hemingway; Ian Garrick-Bethell


Archive | 2018

The Interior of Enceladus

Doug Hemingway; L. Iess; R. Tadjeddine; Gabriel Tobie

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L. Iess

Sapienza University of Rome

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Francis Nimmo

University of California

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Bruce G. Bills

California Institute of Technology

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Caleb W. Whitlock

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Erik Asphaug

Arizona State University

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Francois Martel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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