Ganna Portyankina
University of Colorado Boulder
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ganna Portyankina.
Nature | 2005
J. B. Murray; Jan-Peter Muller; Gerhard Neukum; Stephanie C. Werner; Stephan van Gasselt; Ernst Hauber; Wojciech J. Markiewicz; James W. Head; Bernard H. Foing; David P. Page; Karl L. Mitchell; Ganna Portyankina
It is thought that the Cerberus Fossae fissures on Mars were the source of both lava and water floods two to ten million years ago. Evidence for the resulting lava plains has been identified in eastern Elysium, but seas and lakes from these fissures and previous water flooding events were presumed to have evaporated and sublimed away. Here we present High Resolution Stereo Camera images from the European Space Agency Mars Express spacecraft that indicate that such lakes may still exist. We infer that the evidence is consistent with a frozen body of water, with surface pack-ice, around 5° north latitude and 150° east longitude in southern Elysium. The frozen lake measures about 800 × 900u2009km in lateral extent and may be up to 45u2009metres deep—similar in size and depth to the North Sea. From crater counts, we determined its age to be 5 ± 2 million years old. If our interpretation is confirmed, this is a place that might preserve evidence of primitive life, if it has ever developed on Mars.
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2014
C. Holstein-Rathlou; J. Merrison; J. J. Iversen; A. B. Jakobsen; R. Nicolajsen; P. Nørnberg; K. Rasmussen; A. Merlone; G. Lopardo; T. Hudson; D. Banfield; Ganna Portyankina
Reliable and accurate environmental sensing is a cornerstone of modern meteorology. This paper presents a laboratory environmental simulator capable of reproducing extreme environments and performing tests and calibrationsofmeteorologicalsensorsystemsundercontrolledconditions.Thisfacilityisavailabletotheresearch community as well as industry and isintended toencourage advancement inthefield of sensor metrology applied to meteorology and climatology. Discussion will be made of the temperature, pressure, humidity and wind flow control, and sensing systems with reference to specific sensor test programs and future research activities.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Ganna Portyankina; Antoine Pommerol; K.-M. Aye; Candice J. Hansen; Nicolas Thomas
[1]xa0In this paper, we use morphological and numerical methods to test the hypothesis that seasonally formed fracture patterns in the Martian polar regions result from the brittle failure of seasonal CO2 slab ice. The observations by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) of polar regions of Mars show very narrow dark elongated linear patterns that are observed during some periods of time in spring, disappear in summer and re-appear again in the following spring. They are repeatedly formed in the same areas but they do not repeat the exact pattern from year to year. This leads to the conclusion that they are cracks formed in the seasonal ice layer. Some of models of seasonal surface processes rely on the existence of a transparent form of CO2 ice, so-called slab ice. For the creation of the observed cracks the ice is required to be a continuous media, not an agglomeration of relatively separate particles like a firn. The best explanation for our observations is a slab ice with relatively high transparency in the visible wavelength range. This transparency allows a solid state green-house effect to act underneath the ice sheet raising the pressure by sublimation from below. The trapped gas creates overpressure and the ice sheet breaks at some point creating the observed cracks. We show that the times when the cracks appear are in agreement with the model calculation, providing one more piece of evidence that CO2 slab ice covers polar areas in spring.
Icarus | 2017
Megan E. Schwamb; K.-M. Aye; Ganna Portyankina; Candice J. Hansen; Campbell Allen; Sarah Allen; F. Calef; Simone Duca; Adam McMaster; Grant Miller
Abstract We present the results of a systematic mapping of seasonally sculpted terrains on the South Polar region of Mars with the Planet Four: Terrains (P4T) online citizen science project. P4T enlists members of the general public to visually identify features in the publicly released Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Context Camera (CTX) images. In particular, P4T volunteers are asked to identify: (1) araneiforms (including features with a central pit and radiating channels known as ‘spiders’); (2) erosional depressions, troughs, mesas, ridges, and quasi-circular pits characteristic of the South Polar Residual Cap (SPRC) which we collectively refer to as ‘Swiss cheese terrain’, and (3) craters. In this work we present the distributions of our high confidence classic spider araneiforms and Swiss cheese terrain identifications in 90 CTX images covering 11% of the South polar regions at latitudes ≤ − 75° N. We find no locations within our high confidence spider sample that also have confident Swiss cheese terrain identifications. Previously spiders were reported as being confined to the South Polar Layered Deposits (SPLD). Our work has provided the first identification of spiders at locations outside of the SPLD, confirmed with high resolution HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) imaging. We find araneiforms on the Amazonian and Hesperian polar units and the Early Noachian highland units, with 75% of the identified araneiform locations in our high confidence sample residing on the SPLD. With our current coverage, we cannot confirm whether these are the only geologic units conducive to araneiform formation on the Martian South Polar region. Our results are consistent with the current CO 2 jet formation scenario with the process exploiting weaknesses in the surface below the seasonal CO 2 ice sheet to carve araneiform channels into the regolith over many seasons. These new regions serve as additional probes of the conditions required for channel creation in the CO 2 jet process.
Archive | 2010
Ganna Portyankina; Nicolas Thomas; Paul Hartogh; Hiroyuki Sagawa
Water vapour, despite being a minor constituent in the Martian atmosphere with its precipitable amount of less than 70 pr. μm, attracts considerable attention in the scientific community because of its potential importance for past life on Mars. The partial pressure of water vapour is highly variable because of its seasonal condensation onto the polar caps and exchange with a subsurface reservoir. It is also known to drive photochemical processes: photolysis of water produces H, OH, HO2 and some other odd hydrogen compounds, which in turn destroy ozone. Consequently, the abundance of water vapour is anti-correlated with ozone abundance. n nThe Herschel Space Observatory provides for the first time the possibility to retrieve vertical water profiles in the Martian atmosphere. Herschel will contribute to this topic with its guaranteed-time key project called Water and related chemistry in the solar system. Observations of Mars by Heterodyne Instrument for the Far Infrared (HIFI) and Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) onboard Herschel are planned in the frame of the programme. HIFI with its high spectral resolution enables accurate observations of vertically resolved H2O and temperature profiles in the Martian atmosphere. Unlike HIFI, PACS is not capable of resolving the line-shape of molecular lines. However, our present study of PACS observations for the Martian atmosphere shows that the vertical sensitivity of the PACS observations can be improved by using multiple-line observations with different line opacities. We have investigated the possibility of retrieving vertical profiles of temperature and molecular abundances of minor species including H2O in the Martian atmosphere using PACS. In this paper, we report that PACS is able to provide water vapour vertical profiles for the Martian atmosphere and we present the expected spectra for future PACS observations. We also show that the spectral resolution does not allow the retrieval of several studied minor species, such as H2O2, HCl, NO, SO2, etc.
Icarus | 2018
K.-Michael Aye; Megan E. Schwamb; Ganna Portyankina; Candice J. Hansen; Adam McMaster; Grant Miller; Brian Carstensen; Christopher Snyder; Michael Parrish; Stuart Lynn; Chuhong Mai; David Miller; Robert J. Simpson; Arfon M. Smith
Abstract The springtime sublimation process of Mars’ southern seasonal polar CO2 ice cap features dark fan-shaped deposits appearing on the top of the thawing ice sheet. The fan material likely originates from the surface below the ice sheet, brought up via CO2 jets breaking through the seasonal ice cap. Once the dust and dirt is released into the atmosphere, the material may be blown by the surface winds into the dark streaks visible from orbit. The location, size and direction of these fans record a number of parameters important to quantifying seasonal winds and sublimation activity, the most important agent of geological change extant on Mars. We present results of a systematic mapping of these south polar seasonal fans with the Planet Four online citizen science project. Planet Four enlists the general public to map the shapes, directions, and sizes of the seasonal fans visible in orbital images. Over 80,000 volunteers have contributed to the Planet Four project, reviewing 221 images, from Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter’s HiRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) camera, taken in southern spring during Mars Years 29 and 30. We provide an overview of Planet Four and detail the processes of combining multiple volunteer assessments together to generate a high fidelity catalog of u202f∼u202f400000 south polar seasonal fans. We present the results from analyzing the wind directions at several locations monitored by HiRISE over two Mars years, providing new insights into polar surface winds.
Icarus | 2018
Matthew Mckay Hedman; D. Dhingra; P. D. Nicholson; Candice J. Hansen; Ganna Portyankina; S.-Y. Ye; Y. Dong
Abstract On day 138 of 2010, the plume of dust and gas emerging from Enceladus’ South Polar Terrain passed between the Sun and the Cassini spacecraft. This solar occultation enabled Cassini’s Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS) and the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) to obtain simultaneous measurements of the plume’s gas and dust components along the same lines of sight. The UVIS measurements of the plume’s gas content are described in Hansen etxa0al. (2011, GRL 38:11202) , while this paper describes the VIMS data and the information they provide about the plume’s particle content. Together, the VIMS and UVIS measurements reveal that the plume material above Baghdad and Damascus sulci has a dust-to-gas mass ratio that is roughly an order of magnitude higher than the material above Alexandria and Cairo sulci. Similar trends in the plume’s dust-to-gas ratio are also found in data obtained when Cassini flew through the plume in 2009, during which time the Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS), Radio and Plasma Wave Science instrument (RPWS) and Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA) instruments made in-situ measurements of the plume’s gas and dust densities (Dong etxa0al. 2015 JGR 120:915-937). These and other previously-published systematic differences in the material erupting from different fissures likely reflect variations in subsurface conditions across Encealdus’ South Polar Terrain.
Planetary and Space Science | 2009
Paul Hartogh; E. Lellouch; Jacques Crovisier; M. Banaszkiewicz; F. Bensch; Edwin A. Bergin; Françoise Billebaud; N. Biver; Geoffrey A. Blake; Maria I. Blecka; Joris Blommaert; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; T. Cavalié; J. Cernicharo; R. Courtin; G. R. Davis; Leen Decin; P. Encrenaz; Thérèse Encrenaz; A. González; T. de Graauw; Damien Hutsemekers; C. Jarchow; Emmanuel Jehin; M. Kidger; M. Küppers; A. de Lange; L. M. Lara; D. C. Lis; R. Lorente
Icarus | 2010
Nicolas Thomas; Candice J. Hansen; Ganna Portyankina; Patrick Russell
Icarus | 2010
Ganna Portyankina; Wojciech J. Markiewicz; Nicolas Thomas; Candice J. Hansen; Moses Pollen Milazzo