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Featured researches published by Jason M. Soderblom.


Nature | 2008

The identification of liquid ethane in Titan's Ontario Lacus

Robert H. Brown; L. A. Soderblom; Jason M. Soderblom; Roger N. Clark; R. Jaumann; Jason W. Barnes; Christophe Sotin; Bonnie J. Buratti; Kevin H. Baines; P. D. Nicholson

Titan was once thought to have global oceans of light hydrocarbons on its surface, but after 40 close flybys of Titan by the Cassini spacecraft, it has become clear that no such oceans exist. There are, however, features similar to terrestrial lakes and seas, and widespread evidence for fluvial erosion, presumably driven by precipitation of liquid methane from Titan’s dense, nitrogen-dominated atmosphere. Here we report infrared spectroscopic data, obtained by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) on board the Cassini spacecraft, that strongly indicate that ethane, probably in liquid solution with methane, nitrogen and other low-molecular-mass hydrocarbons, is contained within Titan’s Ontario Lacus.


Science | 2004

Soils of Eagle Crater and Meridiani Planum at the Opportunity Rover Landing Site

L. A. Soderblom; Robert C. Anderson; Raymond E. Arvidson; James F. Bell; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Wendy M. Calvin; Philip R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; T. Economou; B. L. Ehlmann; William H. Farrand; David A. Fike; Ralf Gellert; Timothy D. Glotch; M. Golombek; Ronald Greeley; John P. Grotzinger; K. E. Herkenhoff; Douglas J. Jerolmack; James Richard Johnson; Brad L. Jolliff; G. Klingelhöfer; Andrew H. Knoll; Z. A. Learner; R. Li; M. C. Malin; Scott M. McLennan; Harry Y. McSween; D. W. Ming; Richard V. Morris

The soils at the Opportunity site are fine-grained basaltic sands mixed with dust and sulfate-rich outcrop debris. Hematite is concentrated in spherules eroded from the strata. Ongoing saltation exhumes the spherules and their fragments, concentrating them at the surface. Spherules emerge from soils coated, perhaps from subsurface cementation, by salts. Two types of vesicular clasts may represent basaltic sand sources. Eolian ripples, armored by well-sorted hematite-rich grains, pervade Meridiani Planum. The thickness of the soil on the plain is estimated to be about a meter. The flatness and thin cover suggest that the plain may represent the original sedimentary surface.


Science | 2004

Pancam Multispectral Imaging Results from the Opportunity Rover at Meridiani Planum

James F. Bell; S. W. Squyres; Raymond E. Arvidson; H. M. Arneson; D. S. Bass; Wendy M. Calvin; William H. Farrand; W. Goetz; M. P. Golombek; Ronald Greeley; John P. Grotzinger; Edward A. Guinness; Alexander G. Hayes; M. Y. H. Hubbard; K. E. Herkenhoff; M. J. Johnson; James Richard Johnson; Jonathan Joseph; K. M. Kinch; Mark T. Lemmon; R. Li; M. B. Madsen; J. N. Maki; M. C. Malin; E. McCartney; Scott M. McLennan; Harry Y. McSween; D. W. Ming; Richard V. Morris; E. Z. Noe Dobrea

Panoramic Camera (Pancam) images from Meridiani Planum reveal a low-albedo, generally flat, and relatively rock-free surface. Within and around impact craters and fractures, laminated outcrop rocks with higher albedo are observed. Fine-grained materials include dark sand, bright ferric iron–rich dust, angular rock clasts, and millimeter-size spheroidal granules that are eroding out of the laminated rocks. Spectra of sand, clasts, and one dark plains rock are consistent with mafic silicates such as pyroxene and olivine. Spectra of both the spherules and the laminated outcrop materials indicate the presence of crystalline ferric oxides or oxyhydroxides. Atmospheric observations show a steady decline in dust opacity during the mission. Astronomical observations captured solar transits by Phobos and Deimos and time-lapse observations of sunsets.


Geology | 2006

Sedimentary textures formed by aqueous processes, Erebus crater, Meridiani Planum, Mars

John P. Grotzinger; James F. Bell; K. E. Herkenhoff; James Richard Johnson; Andrew H. Knoll; Elaina McCartney; Scott M. McLennan; Joannah M. Metz; J. M. Moore; S. W. Squyres; R. Sullivan; O. Ahronson; Raymond E. Arvidson; B. L. Joliff; M. P. Golombek; Kevin W. Lewis; T. J. Parker; Jason M. Soderblom

New observations at Erebus crater (Olympia outcrop) by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity between sols 671 and 735 (a sol is a martian day) indicate that a diverse suite of primary and penecontemporaneous sedimentary structures is preserved in sulfate-rich bedrock. Centimeter-scale trough (festoon) cross-lamination is abundant, and is better expressed and thicker than previously described examples. Postdepositional shrinkage cracks in the same outcrop are interpreted to have formed in response to desiccation. Considered collectively, this suite of sedimentary structures provides strong support for the involvement of liquid water during accumulation of sedimentary rocks at Meridiani Planum.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Visible and near-infrared multispectral analysis of rocks at Meridiani Planum, Mars, by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity

William H. Farrand; James F. Bell; James Richard Johnson; Bradley L. Jolliff; Andrew H. Knoll; Scott M. McLennan; S. W. Squyres; Wendy M. Calvin; John P. Grotzinger; Richard V. Morris; Jason M. Soderblom; S. D. Thompson; Wesley Andres Watters; Albert S. Yen

Multispectral measurements in the visible and near infrared of rocks at Meridiani Planum by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunitys Pancam are described. The Pancam multispectral data show that the outcrops of the Burns formation consist of two main spectral units which in stretched 673, 535, 432 nm color composites appear buff- and purple-colored. These units are referred to as the HFS and LFS spectral units based on higher and lower values of 482 to 535 nm slope. Spectral characteristics are consistent with the LFS outcrop consisting of less oxidized, and the HFS outcrop consisting of more oxidized, iron-bearing minerals. The LFS surfaces are not as common and appear, primarily, at the distal ends of outcrop layers and on steep, more massive surfaces, locations that are subject to greater eolian erosion. Consequently, the HFS surfaces are interpreted as a weathering rind. Further inherent spectral differences between layers and between different outcrop map units, both untouched and patches abraded by the rovers Rock Abrasion Tool, are also described. Comparisons of the spectral parameters of the Meridiani outcrop with a set of laboratory reflectance measurements of Fe^(3+)–bearing minerals show that the field of outcrop measurements plots near the fields of hematite, ferrihydrite, poorly crystalline goethite, and schwertmannite. Rind and fracture fill materials, observed intermittently at outcrop exposures, are intermediate in their spectral character between both the HFS and LFS spectral classes and other, less oxidized, surface materials (basaltic sands, spherules, and cobbles).


Science Advances | 2015

Lunar impact basins revealed by Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory measurements

Gregory A. Neumann; Maria T. Zuber; Mark A. Wieczorek; James W. Head; David M.H. Baker; Sean C. Solomon; David E. Smith; Frank G. Lemoine; Erwan Mazarico; Terence J. Sabaka; Sander Goossens; H. J. Melosh; Roger J. Phillips; Sami W. Asmar; Alexander S. Konopliv; James G. Williams; Michael M. Sori; Jason M. Soderblom; Katarina Miljković; Jeffrey C. Andrews-Hanna; Francis Nimmo; Walter S. Kiefer

New gravity measurements greatly improve the Moon’s preserved impact basin inventory. Observations from the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission indicate a marked change in the gravitational signature of lunar impact structures at the morphological transition, with increasing diameter, from complex craters to peak-ring basins. At crater diameters larger than ~200 km, a central positive Bouguer anomaly is seen within the innermost peak ring, and an annular negative Bouguer anomaly extends outward from this ring to the outer topographic rim crest. These observations demonstrate that basin-forming impacts remove crustal materials from within the peak ring and thicken the crust between the peak ring and the outer rim crest. A correlation between the diameter of the central Bouguer gravity high and the outer topographic ring diameter for well-preserved basins enables the identification and characterization of basins for which topographic signatures have been obscured by superposed cratering and volcanism. The GRAIL inventory of lunar basins improves upon earlier lists that differed in their totals by more than a factor of 2. The size-frequency distributions of basins on the nearside and farside hemispheres of the Moon differ substantially; the nearside hosts more basins larger than 350 km in diameter, whereas the farside has more smaller basins. Hemispherical differences in target properties, including temperature and porosity, are likely to have contributed to these different distributions. Better understanding of the factors that control basin size will help to constrain models of the original impactor population.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

The fractured Moon: Production and saturation of porosity in the lunar highlands from impact cratering

Jason M. Soderblom; Alexander J. Evans; Brandon C. Johnson; H. Jay Melosh; Katarina Miljković; Roger J. Phillips; Jeffrey C. Andrews-Hanna; C. J. Bierson; James W. Head; Colleen Milbury; Gregory A. Neumann; Francis Nimmo; David E. Smith; Sean C. Solomon; Michael M. Sori; Mark A. Wieczorek; Maria T. Zuber

We have analyzed the Bouguer anomaly (BA) of ~1200 complex craters in the lunar highlands from Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory observations. The BA of these craters is generally negative, though positive BA values are observed, particularly for smaller craters. Crater BA values scale inversely with crater diameter, quantifying how larger impacts produce more extensive fracturing and dilatant bulking. The Bouguer anomaly of craters larger than 93 þ47 � 19 km in diameter is independent of crater size, indicating that there is a limiting depth to impact-generated porosity, presumably from pore collapse associated with either overburden pressure or viscous flow. Impact-generated porosity of the bulk lunar crust is likely in a state of equilibrium for craters smaller than ~30km in diameter, consistent with an ~8km thick lunar megaregolith, whereas the gravity signature of larger craters is still preserved and provides new insight into the cratering record of even the oldest lunar surfaces.


Planetary Science | 2013

Precipitation-induced surface brightenings seen on Titan by Cassini VIMS and ISS

Jason W. Barnes; Bonnie J. Buratti; Elizabeth P. Turtle; J. Bow; Paul A. Dalba; Jason Perry; Robert H. Brown; Sebastien Rodriguez; Stephane Le Mouelic; Kevin H. Baines; Christophe Sotin; Ralph D. Lorenz; Michael Malaska; Thomas B. McCord; Roger N. Clark; R. Jaumann; Paul O. Hayne; Philip D. Nicholson; Jason M. Soderblom; Laurence A. Soderblom

AbstractObservations from Cassini VIMS and ISS show localized but extensive surface brightenings in the wake of the 2010 September cloudburst. Four separate areas, all at similar latitude, show similar changes: Yalaing Terra, Hetpet Regio, Concordia Regio, and Adiri. Our analysis shows a general pattern to the time-sequence of surface changes: after the cloudburst the areas darken for months, then brighten for a year before reverting to their original spectrum. From the rapid reversion timescale we infer that the process driving the brightening owes to a fine-grained solidified surface layer. The specific chemical composition of such solid layer remains unknown. Evaporative cooling of wetted terrain may play a role in the generation of the layer, or it may result from a physical grain-sorting process.


Icarus | 2014

Evidence of Titan’s climate history from evaporite distribution

Shannon M. MacKenzie; Jason W. Barnes; Christophe Sotin; Jason M. Soderblom; Stephane Le Mouelic; Sebastien Rodriguez; Kevin H. Baines; Bonnie J. Buratti; Roger N. Clark; P. D. Nicholson; Thomas B. McCord

Abstract Water–ice-poor, 5-μm-bright material on Saturn’s moon Titan has previously been geomorphologically identified as evaporitic. Here we present a global distribution of the occurrences of the 5-μm-bright spectral unit, identified with Cassini’s Visual Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) and examined with RADAR when possible. We explore the possibility that each of these occurrences are evaporite deposits. The 5-μm-bright material covers 1% of Titan’s surface and is not limited to the poles (the only regions with extensive, long-lived surface liquid). We find the greatest areal concentration to be in the equatorial basins Tui Regio and Hotei Regio. Our interpretations, based on the correlation between 5-μm-bright material and lakebeds, imply that there was enough liquid present at some time to create the observed 5-μm-bright material. We address the climate implications surrounding a lack of evaporitic material at the south polar basins: if the south pole basins were filled at some point in the past, then where is the evaporite?


Planetary Science | 2014

Cassini/VIMS observes rough surfaces on Titan’s Punga Mare in specular reflection

Jason W. Barnes; Christophe Sotin; Jason M. Soderblom; Robert H. Brown; Alexander G. Hayes; Mark A. Donelan; Sebastien Rodriguez; Stephane Le Mouelic; Kevin H. Baines; Thomas B. McCord

Cassini/VIMS high-phase specular observations of Titan’s north pole during the T85 flyby show evidence for isolated patches of rough liquid surface within the boundaries of the sea Punga Mare. The roughness shows typical slopes of 6°±1°. These rough areas could be either wet mudflats or a wavy sea. Because of their large areal extent, patchy geographic distribution, and uniform appearance at low phase, we prefer a waves interpretation. Applying theoretical wave calculations based on Titan conditions our slope determination allows us to infer winds of 0.76±0.09 m/s and significant wave heights of2−1+2cm at the time and locations of the observation. If correct, these would represent the first waves seen on Titan’s seas, and also the first extraterrestrial sea-surface waves in general.

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Christophe Sotin

California Institute of Technology

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Kevin H. Baines

California Institute of Technology

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R. Jaumann

German Aerospace Center

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K. Stephan

German Aerospace Center

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Roger N. Clark

United States Geological Survey

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