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Dive into the research topics where F. W. Taylor is active.

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Featured researches published by F. W. Taylor.


Radiocarbon | 2004

IntCal04 terrestrial radiocarbon age calibration, 0-26 cal kyr BP.

Paula J. Reimer; M. G. L. Baillie; Edouard Bard; Alex Bayliss; J. Warren Beck; Chanda J H Bertrand; Paul G. Blackwell; Caitlin E. Buck; George S. Burr; Kirsten Banks Cutler; Paul E. Damon; R. Lawrence Edwards; Richard G. Fairbanks; Michael Friedrich; Thomas P. Guilderson; Alan G. Hogg; Konrad A Hughen; Bernd Kromer; Gerry McCormac; Sturt W. Manning; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Ron W Reimer; Sabine Remmele; John Southon; Minze Stuiver; Sahra Talamo; F. W. Taylor; Johannes van der Plicht; Constanze E. Weyhenmeyer

A new calibration curve for the conversion of radiocarbon ages to calibrated (cal) ages has been constructed and internationally ratified to replace IntCal98, which extended from 0-24 cal kyr BP (Before Present, 0 cal BP = AD 1950). The new calibration data set for terrestrial samples extends from 0-26 cal kyr BP, but with much higher resolution beyond 11.4 cal kyr BP than IntCal98. Dendrochronologically-dated tree-ring samples cover the period from 0-12.4 cal kyr BP. Beyond the end of the tree rings, data from marine records (corals and foraminifera) are converted to the atmospheric equivalent with a site-specific marine reservoir correction to provide terrestrial calibration from 12.4-26.0 cal kyr BP. A substantial enhancement relative to IntCal98 is the introduction of a coherent statistical approach based on a random walk model, which takes into account the uncertainty in both the calendar age and the 14C age to calculate the underlying calibration curve (Buck and Blackwell, this issue). The tree-ring data sets, sources of uncertainty, and regional offsets are discussed here. The marine data sets and calibration curve for marine samples from the surface mixed layer (Marine04) are discussed in brief, but details are presented in Hughen et al. (this issue a). We do not make a recommendation for calibration beyond 26 cal kyr BP at this time; however, potential calibration data sets are compared in another paper (van der Plicht et al., this issue).


Advances in Space Research | 1985

Models of the structure of the atmosphere of Venus from the surface to 100 kilometers altitude

A. Seiff; John T. Schofield; Arvydas J. Kliore; F. W. Taylor; Sanjay S. Limaye; Henry E. Revercomb; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; V. V. Kerzhanovich; V.I. Moroz; M.Ya. Marov

From a critical comparison and synthesis of data from the four Pioneer Venus Probes, the Pioneer Venus Orbiter, and the Venera 10, 12, and 13 landers, models of the lower and middle atmosphere of Venus are derived. The models are consistent with the data sets within the measurement uncertainties and established variability of the atmosphere. The models represent the observed variations of state properties with latitude, and preserve the observed static stability. The rationale and the approach used to derive the models are discussed, and the remaining uncertainties are estimated.


Science | 2010

Diviner lunar radiometer observations of cold traps in the moon's south polar region

David A. Paige; Matthew A. Siegler; Jo Ann Zhang; Paul O. Hayne; Emily J. Foote; Kristen A. Bennett; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Benjamin Todd Greenhagen; John T. Schofield; Daniel J. McCleese; Marc C. Foote; Eric DeJong; Bruce G. Bills; Wayne Hartford; Bruce C. Murray; Carlton C. Allen; Kelly Jean Snook; Laurence A. Soderblom; Simon B. Calcutt; F. W. Taylor; Neil E. Bowles; Joshua L. Bandfield; Richard C. Elphic; Rebecca Rose Ghent; Timothy D. Glotch; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Paul G. Lucey

Watering the Moon About a year ago, a spent upper stage of an Atlas rocket was deliberately crashed into a crater at the south pole of the Moon, ejecting a plume of debris, dust, and vapor. The goal of this event, the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) experiment, was to search for water and other volatiles in the soil of one of the coldest places on the Moon: the permanently shadowed region within the Cabeus crater. Using ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared spectroscopy data from accompanying craft, Colaprete et al. (p. 463; see the news story by Kerr; see the cover) found evidence for the presence of water and other volatiles within the ejecta cloud. Schultz et al. (p. 468) monitored the different stages of the impact and the resulting plume. Gladstone et al. (p. 472), using an ultraviolet spectrograph onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), detected H2, CO, Ca, Hg, and Mg in the impact plume, and Hayne et al. (p. 477) measured the thermal signature of the impact and discovered that it had heated a 30 to 200 square-meter region from ∼40 kelvin to at least 950 kelvin. Paige et al. (p. 479) mapped cryogenic zones predictive of volatile entrapment, and Mitrofanov et al. (p. 483) used LRO instruments to confirm that surface temperatures in the south polar region persist even in sunlight. In all, about 155 kilograms of water vapor was emitted during the impact; meanwhile, the LRO continues to orbit the Moon, sending back a stream of data to help us understand the evolution of its complex surface structures. A controlled spacecraft impact into a crater in the lunar south pole plunged through the lunar soil, revealing water and other volatiles. Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment surface-temperature maps reveal the existence of widespread surface and near-surface cryogenic regions that extend beyond the boundaries of persistent shadow. The Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) struck one of the coldest of these regions, where subsurface temperatures are estimated to be 38 kelvin. Large areas of the lunar polar regions are currently cold enough to cold-trap water ice as well as a range of both more volatile and less volatile species. The diverse mixture of water and high-volatility compounds detected in the LCROSS ejecta plume is strong evidence for the impact delivery and cold-trapping of volatiles derived from primitive outer solar system bodies.


Science | 2015

The organic-rich surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko as seen by VIRTIS/Rosetta

F. Capaccioni; Angioletta Coradini; G. Filacchione; S. Erard; Gabriele Arnold; P. Drossart; M.C. De Sanctis; D. Bockelee-Morvan; M. T. Capria; F. Tosi; Cedric Leyrat; B. Schmitt; Eric Quirico; P. Cerroni; V. Mennella; A. Raponi; M. Ciarniello; T. B. McCord; L. V. Moroz; E. Palomba; E. Ammannito; M. A. Barucci; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; Maria I. Blecka; Robert W. Carlson; U. Carsenty; L. Colangeli

The VIRTIS (Visible, Infrared and Thermal Imaging Spectrometer) instrument on board the Rosetta spacecraft has provided evidence of carbon-bearing compounds on the nucleus of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The very low reflectance of the nucleus (normal albedo of 0.060 ± 0.003 at 0.55 micrometers), the spectral slopes in visible and infrared ranges (5 to 25 and 1.5 to 5% kÅ−1), and the broad absorption feature in the 2.9-to-3.6–micrometer range present across the entire illuminated surface are compatible with opaque minerals associated with nonvolatile organic macromolecular materials: a complex mixture of various types of carbon-hydrogen and/or oxygen-hydrogen chemical groups, with little contribution of nitrogen-hydrogen groups. In active areas, the changes in spectral slope and absorption feature width may suggest small amounts of water-ice. However, no ice-rich patches are observed, indicating a generally dehydrated nature for the surface currently illuminated by the Sun.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 1994

High-resolution stratospheric tracer fields estimated from satellite observations using Lagrangian trajectory calculations

Rowan Sutton; Hector Maclean; R. Swinbank; A. O'Neill; F. W. Taylor

Abstract A technique is introduced by which high-resolution tracer fields may be constructed from low-resolution satellite observations. The technique relies upon the continual cascade of tracer variance from large to small scales and makes use of wind fields generated by a data assimilation scheme. To demonstrate its usefulness, the technique has been applied in a study of isentropic distributions of nitrous oxide in the winter midstratosphere, using measurements made by the Improved Stratospheric and Mesospheric Sounder instrument on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite. The results show that the high-resolution fields significantly increase the amount of information that is available from the satellite observations. The fields give insights into the characteristic structure and evolution of tracer distributions at scales that are normally obscured from view. Two results are particularly noteworthy. First, at the interface between low and middle latitudes there is evidence of active mixing. This mixi...


Science | 1996

Near-Infrared Spectroscopy and Spectral Mapping of Jupiter and the Galilean Satellites: Results from Galileo's Initial Orbit

Robert W. Carlson; William D. Smythe; Kevin H. Baines; E. Barbinis; Kris J. Becker; R. Burns; Simon B. Calcutt; Wendy M. Calvin; Roger N. Clark; G. E. Danielson; Ashley Gerard Davies; P. Drossart; Th. Encrenaz; Fraser P. Fanale; James Charles Granahan; Gary B. Hansen; P. Herrera; Charles Arthur Hibbitts; J. Hui; Patrick G. J. Irwin; Torrence V. Johnson; L. W. Kamp; Hugh H. Kieffer; F. Leader; E. Lellouch; Rosaly Lopes-Gautier; Dennis L. Matson; Thomas B. McCord; R. Mehlman; A. Ocampo

The Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer performed spectral studies of Jupiter and the Galilean satellites during the June 1996 perijove pass of the Galileo spacecraft. Spectra for a 5-micrometer hot spot on Jupiter are consistent with the absence of a significant water cloud above 8 bars and with a depletion of water compared to that predicted for solar composition, corroborating results from the Galileo probe. Great Red Spot (GRS) spectral images show that parts of this feature extend upward to 240 millibars, although considerable altitude-dependent structure is found within it. A ring of dense clouds surrounds the GRS and is lower than it by 3 to 7 kilometers. Spectra of Callisto and Ganymede reveal a feature at 4.25 micrometers, attributed to the presence of hydrated minerals or possibly carbon dioxide on their surfaces. Spectra of Europas high latitudes imply that fine-grained water frost overlies larger grains. Several active volcanic regions were found on Io, with temperatures of 420 to 620 kelvin and projected areas of 5 to 70 square kilometers.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Mars Climate Sounder limb profile retrieval of atmospheric temperature, pressure, and dust and water ice opacity

Armin Kleinböhl; John T. Schofield; David Michael Kass; Wedad A. Abdou; C. Backus; B. Sen; James H. Shirley; W. Gregory Lawson; Mark I. Richardson; F. W. Taylor; Nicholas A. Teanby; Daniel J. McCleese

The Mars Climate Sounder (MCS) onboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is the latest of a series of investigations devoted to improving the understanding of current Martian climate. MCS is a nine-channel passive midinfrared and far-infrared filter radiometer designed to measure thermal emission in limb and on-planet geometries from which vertical profiles of atmospheric temperature, water vapor, dust, and condensates can be retrieved. Here we describe the algorithm that is used to retrieve atmospheric profiles from MCS limb measurements for delivery to the Planetary Data System. The algorithm is based on a modified Chahine method and uses a fast radiative transfer scheme based on the Curtis-Godson approximation. It retrieves pressure and vertical profiles of atmospheric temperature, dust opacity, and water ice opacity. Water vapor retrievals involve a different approach and will be reported separately. Pressure can be retrieved to a precision of 1–2% and is used to establish the vertical coordinate. Temperature profiles are retrieved over a range from 5–10 to 80–90 km altitude with a typical altitude resolution of 4–6 km and a precision between 0.5 and 2 K over most of this altitude range. Dust and water ice opacity profiles also achieve vertical resolutions of about 5 km and typically have precisions of 10^(−4)–10^(−5) km^(−1) at 463 cm^(−1) and 843 cm^(−1), respectively. Examples of temperature profiles as well as dust and water ice opacity profiles from the first year of the MCS mission are presented, and atmospheric features observed during periods employing different MCS operational modes are described. An intercomparison with historical temperature measurements from the Mars Global Surveyor mission shows good agreement.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1993

Remote sensing of atmospheric structure and composition by pressure modulator radiometry from space : the ISAMS experiment on UARS

F. W. Taylor; C. D. Rodgers; John G. Whitney; S. T. Werrett; John J. Barnett; Guy D. Peskett; P. Venters; J. Ballard; Christopher W. P. Palmer; R. J. Knight; Paul E. Morris; T. Nightingale; A. Dudhia

The scientific objectives of the improved stratospheric and mesospheric sounder (ISAMS) experiment involve the measurement of global temperature and composition profiles from an instrument on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS). This paper describes the instrument concept, its design, and its performance as calculated and as measured in the laboratory. The data retrieval technique, operating modes, observing strategy, and the error budget are briefly discussed.


Science | 1991

Galileo infrared imaging spectroscopy measurements at Venus

Robert W. Carlson; Kevin H. Baines; Th. Encrenaz; F. W. Taylor; P. Drossart; L. W. Kamp; James B. Pollack; E. Lellouch; A.D. Collard; Simon B. Calcutt; David Harry Grinspoon; Paul R. Weissman; William D. Smythe; A. Ocampo; G. E. Danielson; Fraser P. Fanale; Torrence V. Johnson; Hugh H. Kieffer; Dennis L. Matson; Thomas B. McCord; L. A. Soderblom

During the 1990 Galileo Venus flyby, the Near Infaied Mapping Spectrometer investigated the night-side atmosphere of Venus in the spectral range 0.7 to 5.2 micrometers. Multispectral images at high spatial resolution indicate substanmial cloud opacity variations in the lower cloud levels, centered at 50 kilometers altitude. Zonal and meridional winds were derived for this level and are consistent with motion of the upper branch of a Hadley cell. Northern and southern hemisphere clouds appear to be markedly different. Spectral profiles were used to derive lower atmosphere abundances of water vapor and other species.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Structure and dynamics of the Martian lower and middle atmosphere as observed by the Mars Climate Sounder: Seasonal variations in zonal mean temperature, dust, and water ice aerosols

Daniel J. McCleese; Nicholas G. Heavens; John T. Schofield; Wedad A. Abdou; Joshua L. Bandfield; Simon B. Calcutt; P. G. J. Irwin; David Michael Kass; Armin Kleinböhl; Stephen R. Lewis; David A. Paige; P. L. Read; Mark I. Richardson; James H. Shirley; F. W. Taylor; Nicholas A. Teanby; Richard W. Zurek

[1] The first Martian year and a half of observations by the Mars Climate Sounder aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has revealed new details of the thermal structure and distributions of dust and water ice in the atmosphere. The Martian atmosphere is shown in the observations by the Mars Climate Sounder to vary seasonally between two modes: a symmetrical equinoctial structure with middle atmosphere polar warming and a solstitial structure with an intense middle atmosphere polar warming overlying a deep winter polar vortex. The dust distribution, in particular, is more complex than appreciated before the advent of these high (∼5 km) vertical resolution observations, which extend from near the surface to above 80 km and yield 13 dayside and 13 nightside pole-to-pole cross sections each day. Among the new features noted is a persistent maximum in dust mass mixing ratio at 15-25 km above the surface (at least on the nightside) during northern spring and summer. The water ice distribution is very sensitive to the diurnal and seasonal variation of temperature and is a good tracer of the vertically propagating tide.

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Robert W. Carlson

California Institute of Technology

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Daniel J. McCleese

California Institute of Technology

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Kevin H. Baines

California Institute of Technology

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