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Dive into the research topics where Frank Daerden is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank Daerden.


Science | 2009

Mars Water-Ice Clouds and Precipitation

James A. Whiteway; Leonce Komguem; Cameron S. Dickinson; Curtis R. Cook; M. Illnicki; J. A. Seabrook; Vlad Calin Popovici; Thomas J. Duck; Richard Davy; Peter A. Taylor; Jagruti Pathak; David A. Fisher; A. Carswell; M. Daly; V. J. Hipkin; Aaron P. Zent; Michael H. Hecht; Stephen Wood; Leslie Kay Tamppari; Nilton De Oliveira Renno; John E. Moores; Mark T. Lemmon; Frank Daerden; Peter W. H. Smith

Phoenix Ascending The Phoenix mission landed on Mars in March 2008 with the goal of studying the ice-rich soil of the planets northern arctic region. Phoenix included a robotic arm, with a camera attached to it, with the capacity to excavate through the soil to the ice layer beneath it, scoop up soil and water ice samples, and deliver them to a combination of other instruments—including a wet chemistry lab and a high-temperature oven combined with a mass spectrometer—for chemical and geological analysis. Using this setup, Smith et al. (p. 58) found a layer of ice at depths of 5 to 15 centimeters, Boynton et al. (p. 61) found evidence for the presence of calcium carbonate in the soil, and Hecht et al. (p. 64) found that most of the soluble chlorine at the surface is in the form of perchlorate. Together these results suggest that the soil at the Phoenix landing site must have suffered alteration through the action of liquid water in geologically the recent past. The analysis revealed an alkaline environment, in contrast to that found by the Mars Exploration Rovers, indicating that many different environments have existed on Mars. Phoenix also carried a lidar, an instrument that sends laser light upward into the atmosphere and detects the light scattered back by clouds and dust. An analysis of the data by Whiteway et al. (p. 68) showed that clouds of ice crystals that precipitated back to the surface formed on a daily basis, providing a mechanism to place ice at the surface. Laser remote sensing from Mars’ surface revealed water-ice clouds that formed during the day and precipitated at night. The light detection and ranging instrument on the Phoenix mission observed water-ice clouds in the atmosphere of Mars that were similar to cirrus clouds on Earth. Fall streaks in the cloud structure traced the precipitation of ice crystals toward the ground. Measurements of atmospheric dust indicated that the planetary boundary layer (PBL) on Mars was well mixed, up to heights of around 4 kilometers, by the summer daytime turbulence and convection. The water-ice clouds were detected at the top of the PBL and near the ground each night in late summer after the air temperature started decreasing. The interpretation is that water vapor mixed upward by daytime turbulence and convection forms ice crystal clouds at night that precipitate back toward the surface.


Applied Optics | 2015

NOMAD spectrometer on the ExoMars trace gas orbiter mission: part 1—design, manufacturing and testing of the infrared channels

Eddy Neefs; Ann Carine Vandaele; Rachel Drummond; Ian R. Thomas; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Sofie Delanoye; Bojan Ristic; Jeroen Maes; Sabrina Bonnewijn; Gerry Pieck; Eddy Equeter; C. Depiesse; Frank Daerden; Emiel Van Ransbeeck; D. Nevejans; J. Rodriguez-Gomez; J. J. Lopez-Moreno; Rosario Sanz; Rafael Talero Morales; Gian Paolo Candini; M. Carmen Pastor-Morales; Beatriz Aparicio del Moral; José-Maria Jeronimo-Zafra; Juan Manuel Gómez-López; Gustavo Alonso-Rodrigo; Isabel Pérez-Grande; Javier Cubas; Alejandro M. Gomez-Sanjuan; Fermín Navarro-Medina

NOMAD is a spectrometer suite on board ESAs ExoMars trace gas orbiter due for launch in January 2016. NOMAD consists of two infrared channels and one ultraviolet and visible channel allowing the instrument to perform observations quasi-constantly, by taking nadir measurements at dayside and nightside, and during solar occultations. In this paper, the design, manufacturing, and testing of the two infrared channels are described. We focus upon the optical working principle in these channels, where an echelle grating, used as a diffractive element, is combined with an acousto-optical tunable filter, used as a diffraction order sorter.


Optics Express | 2015

Optical and radiometric models of the NOMAD instrument Part I: The UVIS channel

Ann Carine Vandaele; Yannick Willame; C. Depiesse; Ian R. Thomas; Séverine Robert; D. Bolsée; Manish R. Patel; Jon Mason; M. R. Leese; Stefan Lesschaeve; Philippe Antoine; Frank Daerden; Sofie Delanoye; Rachel Drummond; Eddy Neefs; Bojan Ristic; J. J. Lopez-Moreno; G. Bellucci; Nomad Team

The NOMAD instrument has been designed to best fulfil the science objectives of the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission that will be launched in 2016. The instrument is a combination of three channels that cover the UV, visible and IR spectral ranges and can perform solar occultation, nadir and limb observations. In this series of two papers, we present the optical models representing the three channels of the instrument and use them to determine signal to noise levels for different observation modes and Martian conditions. In this first part, we focus on the UVIS channel, which will sound the Martian atmosphere using nadir and solar occultation viewing modes, covering the 200-650nm spectral range. High SNR levels (>1000) can easily be reached for wavelengths higher than 300nm both in solar occultation and nadir modes when considering binning. Below 300nm SNR are lower primarily because of the lower signal and the impact of atmospheric absorption.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

A solar escalator on Mars: Self‐lifting of dust layers by radiative heating

Frank Daerden; James A. Whiteway; L. Neary; Leonce Komguem; Mark T. Lemmon; N. G. Heavens; Bruce A. Cantor; Eric Hébrard; M. D. Smith

Dust layers detected in the atmosphere of Mars by the light detection and ranging (LIDAR) instrument on the Phoenix Mars mission are explained using an atmospheric general circulation model. The layers were traced back to observed dust storm activity near the edge of the north polar ice cap where simulated surface winds exceeded the threshold for dust lifting by saltation. Heating of the atmospheric dust by solar radiation caused buoyant instability and mixing across the top of the planetary boundary layer (PBL). Differential advection by wind shear created detached dust layers above the PBL that ascended due to radiative heating and arrived at the Phoenix site at heights corresponding to the LIDAR observations. The self-lifting of the dust layers is similar to the “solar escalator” mechanism for aerosol layers in the Earths stratosphere.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2006

A global OClO stratospheric layer discovered in GOMOS stellar occultation measurements

Didier Fussen; Filip Vanhellemont; J. Dodion; Christine Bingen; Nina Mateshvili; Frank Daerden; D. Fonteyn; Quentin Errera; Simon Chabrillat; E. Kyrölä; J. Tamminen; V. F. Sofieva; Alain Hauchecorne; Francis Dalaudier; Jean-Baptiste Renard; R. Fraisse; Odile Fanton d'Andon; G. Barrot; M. Guirlet; A. Mangin; Thorsten Fehr; Paul Snoeij; L. Saavedra

The stratospheric ozone depletion observed in polar regions is caused by several catalytic cycles induced by reactive chlorine and bromine species. By reacting with BrO, ClO causes the formation of OClO which is considered as a proxy of the halogen activation. We present the first global determination of the stratospheric OClO distribution measured during the year 2003 by the stellar occultation spectrometer GOMOS. Besides its expected polar abundance, we discovered the presence of a worldwide OClO layer in the upper stratosphere. At lower altitudes, OClO seems also to be present beyond the limit of the polar vortices, an unreported feature.


Optics Express | 2016

Optical and radiometric models of the NOMAD instrument part II: the infrared channels - SO and LNO

Ian R. Thomas; Ann Carine Vandaele; Séverine Robert; Eddy Neefs; Rachel Drummond; Frank Daerden; Sofie Delanoye; Bojan Ristic; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Jeroen Maes; Sabrina Bonnewijn; C. Depiesse; Arnaud Mahieux; L. Trompet; L. Neary; Yannick Willame; Valérie Wilquet; D. Nevejans; Ludovic Aballea; Wouter Moelans; L. De Vos; Stefan Lesschaeve; N. Van Vooren; J. J. Lopez-Moreno; Manish R. Patel; G. Bellucci

NOMAD is a suite of three spectrometers that will be launched in 2016 as part of the joint ESA-Roscosmos ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission. The instrument contains three channels that cover the IR and UV spectral ranges and can perform solar occultation, nadir and limb observations, to detect and map a wide variety of Martian atmospheric gases and trace species. Part I of this work described the models of the UVIS channel; in this second part, we present the optical models representing the two IR channels, SO (Solar Occultation) and LNO (Limb, Nadir and Occultation), and use them to determine signal to noise ratios (SNRs) for many expected observational cases. In solar occultation mode, both the SO and LNO channel exhibit very high SNRs >5000. SNRs of around 100 were found for the LNO channel in nadir mode, depending on the atmospheric conditions, Martian surface properties, and observation geometry.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Observations of near-surface fog at the Phoenix Mars landing site

John E. Moores; Leonce Komguem; James A. Whiteway; Mark T. Lemmon; Cameron S. Dickinson; Frank Daerden

The Surface Stereo Imager (SSI) on the Phoenix Mars Lander was able to complement the operations of the LIDAR on four occasions during the mission by observing the laser beam while the LIDAR laser was transmitting. These SSI observations permitted measurement of the scatter from atmospheric aerosols below 200 m where the LIDAR emitter and receiver do not overlap fully. The observed laser scattering was used to estimate the ice-water content (IWC) of near surface fog. Values of IWC up to 1.7 ± 1.0 mg m−3 were observed. Compared to air aloft, fog formation was inhibited near the surface which had accumulated at least 30 ± 24 mg m−2 (0.030 pr-μm) on sol 113. Microphysical modeling shows that when precipitation is included, up to 0.48 pr-μm of water may be present on the surface at the time of measurement. Integrated over the entire night, this represents up to 2.5 pr-μm of water taken up diurnally by the surface, or 6% of the total water column.


Icarus | 2018

Saltation under Martian gravity and its influence on the global dust distribution

Grzegorz Musiolik; Maximilian Kruss; Tunahan Demirci; Björn Schrinski; Jens Teiser; Frank Daerden; Michael D. Smith; L. Neary; Gerhard Wurm

Abstract Dust and sand motion are a common sight on Mars. Understanding the interaction of atmosphere and Martian soil is fundamental to describe the planet’s weather, climate and surface morphology. We set up a wind tunnel to study the lift of a mixture between very fine sand and dust in a Mars simulant soil. The experiments were carried out under Martian gravity in a parabolic flight. The reduced gravity was provided by a centrifuge under external microgravity. The onset of saltation was measured for a fluid threshold shear velocity of 0.82 ± 0.04 m/s. This is considerably lower than found under Earth gravity. In addition to a reduction in weight, this low threshold can be attributed to gravity dependent cohesive forces within the sand bed, which drop by 2/3 under Martian gravity. The new threshold for saltation leads to a simulation of the annual dust cycle with a Mars GCM that is in agreement with observations.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

4D-Var assimilation of MIPAS chemical observations: ozone and nitrogen dioxide analyses

Quentin Errera; Frank Daerden; Simon Chabrillat; J. C. Lambert; W. A. Lahoz; S. Viscardy; S. Bonjean; D. Fonteyn


Planetary and Space Science | 2011

Assessment of a 2016 mission concept: The search for trace gases in the atmosphere of Mars

Richard W. Zurek; Augustin Chicarro; Mark Allen; R. Todd Clancy; Frank Daerden; Vittorio Formisano; James B. Garvin; Gerhard Neukum; Michael D. Smith

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L. Neary

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Simon Chabrillat

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Eddy Neefs

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Quentin Errera

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Rachel Drummond

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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