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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey Edward Moersch is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey Edward Moersch.


Science | 2004

The Opportunity Rover's Athena science investigation at Meridiani Planum, Mars

Steven W. Squyres; Raymond E. Arvidson; James F. Bell; J. Brückner; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Wendy M. Calvin; Michael H. Carr; Philip R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; Larry S. Crumpler; D. J. Des Marais; C. d'Uston; Thanasis E. Economou; Jack D. Farmer; William H. Farrand; William M. Folkner; M. P. Golombek; S. Gorevan; Joshua A. Grant; Ronald Greeley; John P. Grotzinger; Larry A. Haskin; K. E. Herkenhoff; S. F. Hviid; James Richard Johnson; G. Klingelhöfer; Andrew H. Knoll; Geoffrey A. Landis; Mark T. Lemmon; R. Li

The Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has investigated the landing site in Eagle crater and the nearby plains within Meridiani Planum. The soils consist of fine-grained basaltic sand and a surface lag of hematite-rich spherules, spherule fragments, and other granules. Wind ripples are common. Underlying the thin soil layer, and exposed within small impact craters and troughs, are flat-lying sedimentary rocks. These rocks are finely laminated, are rich in sulfur, and contain abundant sulfate salts. Small-scale cross-lamination in some locations provides evidence for deposition in flowing liquid water. We interpret the rocks to be a mixture of chemical and siliciclastic sediments formed by episodic inundation by shallow surface water, followed by evaporation, exposure, and desiccation. Hematite-rich spherules are embedded in the rock and eroding from them. We interpret these spherules to be concretions formed by postdepositional diagenesis, again involving liquid water.


Science | 2004

Mineralogy at Meridiani Planum from the Mini-TES experiment on the opportunity rover

Philip R. Christensen; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Timothy D. Glotch; A. D. Rogers; Saadat Anwar; Raymond E. Arvidson; Joshua L. Bandfield; Diana L. Blaney; Charles John Budney; Wendy M. Calvin; A. Fallacaro; R. L. Fergason; Noel Gorelick; T. G. Graff; Victoria E. Hamilton; Alexander G. Hayes; James Richard Johnson; Amy T. Knudson; Harry Y. McSween; Greg L. Mehall; L. K. Mehall; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Richard V. Morris; M. D. Smith; S. W. Squyres; Steven W. Ruff; M. J. Wolff

The Miniature Thermal Emission Spectrometer (Mini-TES) on Opportunity investigated the mineral abundances and compositions of outcrops, rocks, and soils at Meridiani Planum. Coarse crystalline hematite and olivine-rich basaltic sands were observed as predicted from orbital TES spectroscopy. Outcrops of aqueous origin are composed of 15 to 35% by volume magnesium and calcium sulfates [a high-silica component modeled as a combination of glass, feldspar, and sheet silicates (∼20 to 30%)], and hematite; only minor jarosite is identified in Mini-TES spectra. Mini-TES spectra show only a hematite signature in the millimeter-sized spherules. Basaltic materials have more plagioclase than pyroxene, contain olivine, and are similar in inferred mineral composition to basalt mapped from orbit. Bounce rock is dominated by clinopyroxene and is close in inferred mineral composition to the basaltic martian meteorites. Bright wind streak material matches global dust. Waterlain rocks covered by unaltered basaltic sands suggest a change from an aqueous environment to one dominated by physical weathering.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Characterization and petrologic interpretation of olivine‐rich basalts at Gusev Crater, Mars

Y. McSween; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Ralf Gellert; James F. Bell; Richard V. Morris; K. E. Herkenhoff; Larry S. Crumpler; Keith A. Milam; Karen R. Stockstill; Livio L. Tornabene; Raymond E. Arvidson; Paul Bartlett; Diana L. Blaney; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Philip R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; Joy A. Crisp; D. J. Des Marais; T. Economou; Jack D. Farmer; William H. Farrand; Anupam Ghosh; M. P. Golombek; S. Gorevan; Ronald Greeley; Victoria E. Hamilton; James Richard Johnson; B. L. Joliff; G. Klingelhöfer; Amy T. Knudson

Additional co-authors: PR Christensen, BC Clark, JA Crisp, DJ DesMarais, T Economou, JD Farmer, W Farrand, A Ghosh, M Golombek, S Gorevan, R Greeley, VE Hamilton, JR Johnson, BL Joliff, G Klingelhofer, AT Knudson, S McLennan, D Ming, JE Moersch, R Rieder, SW Ruff, PA de Souza Jr, SW Squyres, H Wnke, A Wang, A Yen, J Zipfel


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Overview of the Spirit Mars Exploration Rover Mission to Gusev Crater: Landing site to Backstay Rock in the Columbia Hills

Raymond E. Arvidson; S. W. Squyres; Robert C. Anderson; James F. Bell; Diana L. Blaney; J. Brückner; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Wendy M. Calvin; Michael H. Carr; Philip R. Christensen; B. C. Clark; Larry S. Crumpler; D. J. Des Marais; P. A. de Souza; C. d'Uston; T. Economou; Jack D. Farmer; William H. Farrand; William M. Folkner; M. P. Golombek; S. Gorevan; J. A. Grant; Ronald Greeley; John P. Grotzinger; Edward A. Guinness; Brian C. Hahn; Larry A. Haskin; K. E. Herkenhoff; Joel A. Hurowitz; S. F. Hviid

Spirit landed on the floor of Gusev Crater and conducted initial operations on soil-covered, rock-strewn cratered plains underlain by olivine-bearing basalts. Plains surface rocks are covered by wind-blown dust and show evidence for surface enrichment of soluble species as vein and void-filling materials and coatings. The surface enrichment is the result of a minor amount of transport and deposition by aqueous processes. Layered granular deposits were discovered in the Columbia Hills, with outcrops that tend to dip conformably with the topography. The granular rocks are interpreted to be volcanic ash and/or impact ejecta deposits that have been modified by aqueous fluids during and/or after emplacement. Soils consist of basaltic deposits that are weakly cohesive, relatively poorly sorted, and covered by a veneer of wind-blown dust. The soils have been homogenized by wind transport over at least the several kilometer length scale traversed by the rover. Mobilization of soluble species has occurred within at least two soil deposits examined. The presence of monolayers of coarse sand on wind-blown bedforms, together with even spacing of granule-sized surface clasts, suggests that some of the soil surfaces encountered by Spirit have not been modified by wind for some time. On the other hand, dust deposits on the surface and rover deck have changed during the course of the mission. Detection of dust devils, monitoring of the dust opacity and lower boundary layer, and coordinated experiments with orbiters provided new insights into atmosphere-surface dynamics.


Nature | 2005

Evidence for magmatic evolution and diversity on Mars from infrared observations

P. R. Christensen; Harry Y. McSween; Joshua L. Bandfield; Steven W. Ruff; A. D. Rogers; Victoria E. Hamilton; Noel Gorelick; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Bruce M. Jakosky; Hugh H. Kieffer; M. C. Malin; Jeffrey Edward Moersch

Compositional mapping of Mars at the 100-metre scale with the Mars Odyssey Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) has revealed a wide diversity of igneous materials. Volcanic evolution produced compositions from low-silica basalts to high-silica dacite in the Syrtis Major caldera. The existence of dacite demonstrates that highly evolved lavas have been produced, at least locally, by magma evolution through fractional crystallization. Olivine basalts are observed on crater floors and in layers exposed in canyon walls up to 4.5 km beneath the surface. This vertical distribution suggests that olivine-rich lavas were emplaced at various times throughout the formation of the upper crust, with their growing inventory suggesting that such ultramafic (picritic) basalts may be relatively common. Quartz-bearing granitoid rocks have also been discovered, demonstrating that extreme differentiation has occurred. These observations show that the martian crust, while dominated by basalt, contains a diversity of igneous materials whose range in composition from picritic basalts to granitoids rivals that found on the Earth.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Spirit Mars Rover Mission to the Columbia Hills, Gusev Crater: Mission overview and selected results from the Cumberland Ridge to Home Plate

Raymond E. Arvidson; Steven W. Ruff; Richard V. Morris; D. W. Ming; Larry S. Crumpler; Albert S. Yen; Steven W. Squyres; R. Sullivan; James F. Bell; Nathalie A. Cabrol; B. C. Clark; William H. Farrand; R. Gellert; R. N. Greenberger; J. A. Grant; Edward A. Guinness; K. E. Herkenhoff; Joel A. Hurowitz; James Richard Johnson; G. Klingelhöfer; Kevin W. Lewis; R. Li; Timothy J. McCoy; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Harry Y. McSween; Scott L. Murchie; Mariek E. Schmidt; Christian Schröder; Aihui H. Wang; Sandra Margot Wiseman

This paper summarizes the Spirit rover operations in the Columbia Hills of Gusev Crater from sols 513 to 1476 and provides an overview of selected findings that focus on synergistic use of the Athena Payload and comparisons to orbital data. Results include discovery of outcrops (Voltaire) on Husband Hill that are interpreted to be altered impact melt deposits that incorporated local materials during emplacement. Evidence for extensive volcanic activity and aqueous alteration in the Inner Basin is also detailed, including discovery and characterization of accretionary lapilli and formation of sulfate, silica, and hematite-rich deposits. Use of Spirits data to understand the range of spectral signatures observed over the Columbia Hills by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiters Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer (CRISM) hyperspectral imager (0.4–4 μm) is summarized. We show that CRISM spectra are controlled by the proportion of ferric-rich dust to ferrous-bearing igneous minerals exposed in ripples and other wind-blown deposits. The evidence for aqueous alteration derived from Spirits data is associated with outcrops that are too small to be detected from orbital observations or with materials exposed from the shallow subsurface during rover activities. Although orbital observations show many other locations on Mars with evidence for minerals formed or altered in an aqueous environment, Spirits data imply that the older crust of Mars has been altered even more extensively than evident from orbital data. This result greatly increases the potential that the surface or shallow subsurface was once a habitable regime.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Life in the Atacama: Searching for life with rovers (science overview)

Nathalie A. Cabrol; David Wettergreen; Kim Warren-Rhodes; Edmond A. Grin; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Guillermo Chong Diaz; Charles S. Cockell; Peter Coppin; Cecilia Demergasso; James M. Dohm; Lauren A. Ernst; Gregory W. Fisher; Justin M. Glasgow; Craig Hardgrove; Andrew N. Hock; Dominic Jonak; Lucia Marinangeli; Edwin Minkley; Gian Gabriele Ori; J. L. Piatek; Erin Pudenz; Trey Smith; Kristen Stubbs; Geb W. Thomas; David R. Thompson; Alan S. Waggoner; Michael D. Wagner; S. Weinstein; Michael Bruce Wyatt

[1] The Life in the Atacama project investigated the regional distribution of life and habitats in the Atacama Desert of Chile. We sought to create biogeologic maps through survey traverses across the desert using a rover carrying biologic and geologic instruments. Elements of our science approach were to: Perform ecological transects from the relatively wet coastal range to the arid core of the desert; use converging evidence from science instruments to reach conclusions about microbial abundance; and develop and test exploration strategies adapted to the search of scattered surface and shallow subsurface microbial oases. Understanding the ability of science teams to detect and characterize microbial life signatures remotely using a rover became central to the project. Traverses were accomplished using an autonomous rover in a method that is technologically relevant to Mars exploration. We present an overview of the results of the 2003, 2004, and 2005 field investigations. They include: The confirmed identification of microbial habitats in daylight by detecting fluorescence signals from chlorophyll and dye probes; the characterization of geology by imaging and spectral measurement; the mapping of life along transects; the characterization of environmental conditions; the development of mapping techniques including homogeneous biological scoring and predictive models of habitat location; the development of exploration strategies adapted to the search for life with an autonomous rover capable of up to 10 km of daily traverse; and the autonomous detection of life by the rover as it interprets observations on-the-fly and decides which targets to pursue with further analysis.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1999

Deep Space 2 : The Mars Microprobe Mission

Suzanne E. Smrekar; David C. Catling; Ralph D. Lorenz; Julio Magalhães; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Paul Morgan; Bruce C. Murray; Marsha A. Presley; Albert S. Yen; Aaron P. Zent; Diana L. Blaney

The Mars Microprobe Mission will be the second of the New Millennium Programs technology development missions to planetary bodies. The mission consists of two penetrators that weigh 2.4 kg each and are being carried as a piggyback payload on the Mars Polar Lander cruise ring. The spacecraft arrive at Mars on December 3, 1999. The two identical penetrators will impact the surface at ∼190 m/s and penetrate up to 0.6 m. They will land within 1 to 10 km of each other and ∼50 km from the Polar Lander on the south polar layered terrain. The primary objective of the mission is to demonstrate technologies that will enable future science missions and, in particular, network science missions. A secondary goal is to acquire science data. A subsurface evolved water experiment and a thermal conductivity experiment will estimate the water content and thermal properties of the regolith. The atmospheric density, pressure, and temperature will be derived using descent deceleration data. Impact accelerometer data will be used to determine the depth of penetration, the hardness of the regolith, and the presence or absence of 10 cm scale layers.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2001

The 1999 Marsokhod rover mission simulation at Silver Lake, California: Mission overview, data sets, and summary of results

Carol R. Stoker; Nathalie A. Cabrol; T. R. Roush; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; Jayne C. Aubele; Nadine G. Barlow; E. A. Bettis Iii; Janice L. Bishop; Mary G. Chapman; S. M. Clifford; Charles S. Cockell; Larry S. Crumpler; Robert A. Craddock; R. De Hon; T. Foster; V. C. Gulick; Edmond A. Grin; Keith A. Horton; G. Hovde; James Richard Johnson; Pascal Lee; Mark T. Lemmon; J. Marshall; H. Newsom; Gian Gabriele Ori; Mark K. Reagan; J. W. Rice; Steven W. Ruff; J. Schreiner; M. Sims

We report on a field experiment held near Silver Lake playa in the Mojave Desert in February 1999 with the Marsokhod rover. The payload (Descent Imager, PanCam, Mini-TES, and Robotic Arm Camera), data volumes, and data transmission/receipt windows simulated those planned for the Mars Surveyor mission selected for 2001. A central mast with a pan and tilt platform at 150 cm height carried a high-resolution color stereo imager to simulate the PanCam and a visible/near-infrared fiberoptic spectrometer (operating range 0.35–2.5 μm). Monochrome stereo navigation cameras were mounted on the mast and the front and rear of the rover near the wheels. A field portable infrared spectroradiometer (operating range 8–14 μm) simulated the Mini-TES. A Robotic Arm Camera, capable of close-up color imaging at 23 μm/pixel resolution, was used in conjunction with the excavation of a trench into the subsurface. The science team was also provided with simulated images from the Mars Descent Imager and orbital panchromatic and multispectral imaging of the site obtained with the French SPOT, airborne Thermal Infrared Mapping Spectrometer, and Landsat Thematic Mapper instruments. Commands sequences were programmed and sent daily to the rover, and data returned were limited to 40 Mbits per communication cycle. During the simulated mission, 12 commands were uplinked to the rover, it traversed ∼90 m, six sites were analyzed, 11 samples were collected for laboratory analysis, and over 5 Gbits of data were collected. Twenty-two scientists, unfamiliar with the location of the field site, participated in the science mission from a variety of locations, accessing data via the World Wide Web. Remote science interpretations were compared with ground truth from the field and laboratory analysis of collected samples. Using this payload and mission approach, the science team synergistically interpreted orbital imaging and infrared spectroscopy, descent imaging, rover-based imaging, infrared spectroscopy, and microscopic imaging to deduce a consistent and largely correct interpretation of the geology, mineralogy, stratigraphy, and exobiology of the site. Use of imaging combined with infrared spectroscopy allowed source outcrops to be identified for local rocks on an alluvial fan. Different lithologies were distinguished both near the rover and at distances of hundreds of meters or more. Subtle differences such as a contact between dolomite and calcite were identified at a distance of 0.5 km. A biomarker for endolithic microbiota, a plausible life form to be found on Mars, was successfully identified. Microscopic imaging of soils extracted from the surface and subsurface allowed the mineralogy and fluvial history of the trench site to be deduced. The scientific productivity of this simulation shows that this payload and mission approach has high science value and would contribute substantially to achieving the goals of Mars exploration.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Water and chlorine content in the Martian soil along the first 1900 m of the Curiosity rover traverse as estimated by the DAN instrument

I. G. Mitrofanov; M. L. Litvak; A. B. Sanin; Richard D. Starr; D. Lisov; Ruslan O. Kuzmin; Alberto Behar; William V. Boynton; Craig Hardgrove; K. Harshman; Insoo Jun; Ralph E. Milliken; Michael A. Mischna; Jeffrey Edward Moersch; C. Tate

The presence of hydrated phases in the soil and near-surface bedrock of Gale Crater is thought to be direct evidence for water-rock interaction in the crater in the ancient past. Layered sediments over the Gale Crater floor are thought to have formed in past epochs due to sediment transport, accumulation, and cementation through interaction with fluids, and the observed strata of water-bearing minerals record the history of these episodes. The first data analysis of the Dynamic Albedo of Neutrons (DAN) investigation on board the Curiosity rover is presented for 154 individual points of active mode measurements along 1900 m of the traverse over the first 361 Martian solar days in Gale crater. It is found that a model of constant water content within subsurface should be rejected for practically all tested points, whereas a two-layer model with different water contents in each layer is supported by the data. A so-called direct two-layer model (water content increasing with depth) yields acceptable fits for odometry ranges between 0 and 455 m and beyond 638 m. The mean water (H2O) abundances of the top and bottom layers vary from 1.5 to 1.7 wt % and from 2.2 to 3.3 wt %, respectively, while at some tested spots the water content is estimated to be as high as ~5 wt %. The data for odometry range 455–638 m support an inverse two-layer model (water content decreasing with depth), with an estimated mean water abundance of 2.1 ± 0.1 wt % and 1.4 ± 0.04 wt % in the top and bottom layers, respectively.

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Raymond E. Arvidson

Washington University in St. Louis

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David Wettergreen

Carnegie Mellon University

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Steven W. Ruff

Arizona State University

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J. L. Piatek

University of Tennessee

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