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Dive into the research topics where Ewen A. Whitaker is active.

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Featured researches published by Ewen A. Whitaker.


Earth Moon and Planets | 1972

Lunar color boundaries and their relationship to topographic features: A preliminary survey

Ewen A. Whitaker

By combining UV negatives with IR positives of the full Moon, it is possible to suppress albedo differences and to enhance color differences between various lunar regions. Areas within the lunar maria exhibit the greatest color variations, and many have sharp boundaries. In contrast, the terrae in general show only feeble color variations, although small terra regions situated near or surrounded by maria sometimes display enhanced redness.The mare color boundaries in some cases coincide with the edges of clear-cut lava flows, the bluer material overlying the redder. One wedge-shaped area of bluer material corresponds with a prominent sinuous rille, the rille source being situated precisely in the point of the wedge. This area has obliterated portions of two ray systems, showing that the bluer material was deposited later than both the surrounding redder material and the ray material. On the other hand, rays from the crater Olbers A cross both colored areas impartially. Other examples of ray obliteration by bluer deposits are found elsewhere. From Apollo and Surveyor analyses, it is found that there is an apparent correlation between degree of blueness and titanium content of the surface materials.The following conclusions may be drawn:(a)The various maria were deposited over considerable lengths of time; this does not support the fusion-through-impact hypothesis.(b)The bluer materials, which appear to be those of high Ti content, are the more recent.(c)The hypothesis that sinuous rilles are lava drainage channels is supported.(d)The terrae covered by this study are mostly monotonous, suggesting constant composition, but a few anomalously red isolated regions may be of substantially different composition.


Earth Moon and Planets | 1977

The Aristarchus-Harbinger region of the moon: Surface geology and history from recent remote-sensing observations

Stanley H. Zisk; Carroll Ann Hodges; H. J. Moore; R. W. Shorthill; T. W. Thompson; Ewen A. Whitaker; Don E. Wilhelms

The region including the Aristarchus Plateau and Montes Harbinger is probably the most diverse, geologically, of any area of comparble size on the Moon. This part of the northwest quadrant of the lunar near side includes unique dark mantling material; both the densest concentration and the largest of the sinuous rilles; apparent volcanic vents, sinks, and domes; mare materials of various ages and colors; one of the freshest large craters (Aristarchus) with ejecta having unique colors and albedos; and three other large craters in different states of flooding and degradation (krieger, Herodotus, and Prinz). The three best-authenticated lunar transient phenomena were also observed here.This study is based principally on photographic and remote sensing observations made from Earth and Apollo orbiting space craft. Results include (1) delineation of geologic map units and their stratigraphic relationships; (2) discussion of the complex interrelationships between materials of volcanic and impact origin, including the effects of excavation, redistribution and mixing of previously deposited materials by younger impact craters; (3) deduction of physical and chemical properties of certain of the geologic units, based on both the remote-sensing information and on extrapolation of Apollo data to this area; and (4) development of a detailed geologic history of the region, outlining the probable sequence of events that resulted in its present appearance.A primary concern of the investigation has been anomalous red dark mantle on the Plateau. Based on an integration of Earth- and lunar orbit-based data, this layer seems to consist of fine-grained, block-free material containing a relatively large fraction of orange glass. It is probably of pyroclastic origin, laid down at some time during the Imbrian period of mare flooding.


Science | 1967

Surveyor V: Television pictures

E. M. Shoemaker; Raymond M. Batson; H. E. Holt; Elliot C. Morris; J. J. Rennilson; Ewen A. Whitaker

Surveyor V landed in a small crater, 8.5 meters wide and 12.5 meters long, which was probably formed by drainage of surficial fragmental debris into a subsurface fissure. The lunar surface debris layer is exposed in the walls of this crater. At depths below about 10 centimeters, the debris appears to be composed mainly of shock-compressed aggregates, ranging from a few millimeters up to 3 centimeters in diameter, set in a matrix of less-coherent finer particles. Rocky chips and fragments larger than a millimeter are dispersed as a subordinate constituent of the debris.


Science | 1963

Low-Latitude Noctilucent Cloud of 15 June 1963

Aden B. Meinel; Barbara M. Middlehurst; Ewen A. Whitaker

A bright noctilucent cloud was observed and photographed north-west of Tucson on 15 June 1963. Results of computations indicate that the cloud was at a height of 71 kilometers. The cloud appears to have resulted from the launching of a Scout space vehicle.


Earth Moon and Planets | 1974

Mare serenitatis: a preliminary definition of surface units by remote observations

T. W. Thompson; R. W. Shorthill; Ewen A. Whitaker; Stanley H. Zisk

There are many surface units in Mare Serenitatis and in the adjacent Montes Haemus that can be defined by remote, Earth-based observations at visual, infrared, and radar wavelengths. These highland and mare surface units are obvious in color-difference photographs and in radar images, while the infrared images have little or no differences. These characteristics are consistent with units having definite chemical differences. However, a better definition of these surfaces requires the synthesis of many more data sets.


Icarus | 1979

Implications for asteroidal regolith properties from comparisons with the lunar phase relation and theoretical considerations

Ewen A. Whitaker

Abstract The phase relations of several asteroids. Mercury, and the Moon display the same basic characteristics, but differ slightly in detail. An improved treatment of the photometric function for open-work particulate layers shows that for phase angles greater than about 7°, the shape of the curves is diagnostic of the presence of such layers, and that both the shape and slope of the curves is dependent primarily upon the bulk density of these layers. This treatment also strongly indicates that the “opposition effect” is not due to shadow hiding in a regolith of very low bulk density. Other data support the idea that this effect is unrelated to shadow-hiding phenomena, and that it may thus be a diffraction/scattering effect with or without internal reflection phenomena also.


Archive | 1967

CONSOLIDATED LUNAR ATLAS

G. P. Kuiper; Robert G. Strom; Ewen A. Whitaker; John Fountain; Stephen M. Larson


Archive | 1963

Rectified lunar atlas

William K. Hartmann; G. P. Kuiper; L. H. Spradley; Ewen A. Whitaker


Science | 1966

Russian Luna IX Pictures: Provisional Analysis.

G. P. Kuiper; Robert G. Strom; Rudolf S. Le Poole; Ewen A. Whitaker


Science | 1966

Surveyor I location.

Ewen A. Whitaker

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Stanley H. Zisk

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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T. W. Thompson

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Carroll Ann Hodges

United States Geological Survey

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Don E. Wilhelms

United States Geological Survey

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