Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kimberly D. Seelos is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kimberly D. Seelos.


Nature | 2008

Hydrated silicate minerals on Mars observed by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter CRISM instrument

John F. Mustard; Scott L. Murchie; Shannon Pelkey; B. L. Ehlmann; Ralph E. Milliken; John A. Grant; Jean-Pierre Bibring; F. Poulet; Jack B. Bishop; E. Z. Noe Dobrea; L. H. Roach; F. P. Seelos; Raymond E. Arvidson; Sandra Margot Wiseman; Robert O. Green; C. D. Hash; David Carl Humm; Erick R. Malaret; J. A. McGovern; Kimberly D. Seelos; Thomas E. Clancy; Roger N. Clark; D. J. Des Marais; Noam R. Izenberg; Amy T. Knudson; Yves Langevin; Terry Z. Martin; Patrick C. McGuire; Richard V. Morris; Mark S. Robinson

Phyllosilicates, a class of hydrous mineral first definitively identified on Mars by the OMEGA (Observatoire pour la Mineralogie, L’Eau, les Glaces et l’Activitié) instrument, preserve a record of the interaction of water with rocks on Mars. Global mapping showed that phyllosilicates are widespread but are apparently restricted to ancient terrains and a relatively narrow range of mineralogy (Fe/Mg and Al smectite clays). This was interpreted to indicate that phyllosilicate formation occurred during the Noachian (the earliest geological era of Mars), and that the conditions necessary for phyllosilicate formation (moderate to high pH and high water activity) were specific to surface environments during the earliest era of Mars’s history. Here we report results from the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) of phyllosilicate-rich regions. We expand the diversity of phyllosilicate mineralogy with the identification of kaolinite, chlorite and illite or muscovite, and a new class of hydrated silicate (hydrated silica). We observe diverse Fe/Mg-OH phyllosilicates and find that smectites such as nontronite and saponite are the most common, but chlorites are also present in some locations. Stratigraphic relationships in the Nili Fossae region show olivine-rich materials overlying phyllosilicate-bearing units, indicating the cessation of aqueous alteration before emplacement of the olivine-bearing unit. Hundreds of detections of Fe/Mg phyllosilicate in rims, ejecta and central peaks of craters in the southern highland Noachian cratered terrain indicate excavation of altered crust from depth. We also find phyllosilicate in sedimentary deposits clearly laid by water. These results point to a rich diversity of Noachian environments conducive to habitability.


Science | 2009

Distribution of Mid-Latitude Ground Ice on Mars from New Impact Craters

Shane Byrne; Colin M. Dundas; Megan R. Kennedy; Michael T. Mellon; Alfred S. McEwen; Selby C. Cull; Ingrid Daubar; David E. Shean; Kimberly D. Seelos; Scott L. Murchie; Bruce A. Cantor; Raymond E. Arvidson; Kenneth S. Edgett; A. Reufer; Nicolas Thomas; Tanya N. Harrison; Liliya V. Posiolova; F. P. Seelos

Martian Impact Impact craters form frequently on Mars, exposing material that would otherwise remain hidden below the surface. Byrne et al. (p. 1674) identified mid-latitude craters that formed over the last few years, imaged them in great detail with a camera on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and monitored subsequent changes. The craters excavated buried water ice, which was later seen sublimating away. In addition, some craters might have excavated completely through the ice. The observations are consistent with models and other observations that suggest water ice should be stable decimeters to about 1 meter below the martian surface at latitudes poleward of about 40°; and suggest that, in the recent past, Mars had a wetter atmosphere than at present. Observations of ground ice exposed by recent impact craters probe the composition of the upper layers of the surface of Mars. New impact craters at five sites in the martian mid-latitudes excavated material from depths of decimeters that has a brightness and color indicative of water ice. Near-infrared spectra of the largest example confirm this composition, and repeated imaging showed fading over several months, as expected for sublimating ice. Thermal models of one site show that millimeters of sublimation occurred during this fading period, indicating clean ice rather than ice in soil pores. Our derived ice-table depths are consistent with models using higher long-term average atmospheric water vapor content than present values. Craters at most of these sites may have excavated completely through this clean ice, probing the ice table to previously unsampled depths of meters and revealing substantial heterogeneity in the vertical distribution of the ice itself.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Nature and origin of the hematite‐bearing plains of Terra Meridiani based on analyses of orbital and Mars Exploration rover data sets

Raymond E. Arvidson; F. Poulet; Richard V. Morris; Jean-Pierre Bibring; James F. Bell; S. W. Squyres; Philip R. Christensen; G. Bellucci; B. Gondet; B. L. Ehlmann; William H. Farrand; R. L. Fergason; M. Golombek; J. L. Griffes; John P. Grotzinger; Edward A. Guinness; K. E. Herkenhoff; James Richard Johnson; G. Klingelhöfer; Yves Langevin; D. W. Ming; Kimberly D. Seelos; R. Sullivan; J. Ward; Sandra Margot Wiseman; M. J. Wolff

The ~5 km of traverses and observations completed by the Opportunity rover from Endurance crater to the Fruitbasket outcrop show that the Meridiani plains consist of sulfate-rich sedimentary rocks that are largely covered by poorly-sorted basaltic aeolian sands and a lag of granule-sized hematitic concretions. Orbital reflectance spectra obtained by Mars Express OMEGA over this region are dominated by pyroxene, plagioclase feldspar, crystalline hematite (i.e., concretions), and nano-phase iron oxide dust signatures, consistent with Pancam and Mini-TES observations. Mossbauer Spectrometer observations indicate more olivine than observed with the other instruments, consistent with preferential optical obscuration of olivine features in mixtures with pyroxene and dust. Orbital data covering bright plains located several kilometers to the south of the landing site expose a smaller areal abundance of hematite, more dust, and a larger areal extent of outcrop compared to plains proximal to the landing site. Low-albedo, low-thermal-inertia, windswept plains located several hundred kilometers to the south of the landing site are predicted from OMEGA data to have more hematite and fine-grained olivine grains exposed as compared to the landing site. Low calcium pyroxene dominates spectral signatures from the cratered highlands to the south of Opportunity. A regional-scale model is presented for the formation of the plains explored by Opportunity, based on a rising ground water table late in the Noachian Era that trapped and altered local materials and aeolian basaltic sands. Cessation of this aqueous process led to dominance of aeolian processes and formation of the current configuration of the plains.


Science | 2007

A Closer Look at Water-Related Geologic Activity on Mars

Alfred S. McEwen; Carl J. Hansen; W. A. Delamere; Eric M. Eliason; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; Laszlo P. Keszthelyi; V. C. Gulick; R. L. Kirk; Michael T. Mellon; John A. Grant; Nicolas Thomas; Catherine M. Weitz; Steven W. Squyres; Nathan T. Bridges; Scott L. Murchie; F. P. Seelos; Kimberly D. Seelos; Chris H. Okubo; Moses Pollen Milazzo; Livio L. Tornabene; Windy L. Jaeger; Shane Byrne; Patrick Russell; J. L. Griffes; Sara Martínez-Alonso; A. Davatzes; Frank C. Chuang; B. J. Thomson; Kathryn Elspeth Fishbaugh; Colin M. Dundas

Water has supposedly marked the surface of Mars and produced characteristic landforms. To understand the history of water on Mars, we take a close look at key locations with the High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, reaching fine spatial scales of 25 to 32 centimeters per pixel. Boulders ranging up to ∼2 meters in diameter are ubiquitous in the middle to high latitudes, which include deposits previously interpreted as finegrained ocean sediments or dusty snow. Bright gully deposits identify six locations with very recent activity, but these lie on steep (20° to 35°) slopes where dry mass wasting could occur. Thus, we cannot confirm the reality of ancient oceans or water in active gullies but do see evidence of fluvial modification of geologically recent mid-latitude gullies and equatorial impact craters.


Geology | 2013

A hematite-bearing layer in Gale Crater, Mars: Mapping and implications for past aqueous conditions

A. A. Fraeman; Raymond E. Arvidson; Jeffrey G. Catalano; John P. Grotzinger; Richard V. Morris; Scott L. Murchie; K. Stack; David Carl Humm; J. A. McGovern; F. P. Seelos; Kimberly D. Seelos; C. E. Viviano

Oversampled Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) visible and near-infrared hyperspectral data over Mount Sharp in Gale Crater, Mars, were used to generate spatially sharpened maps of the location of red crystalline hematite within the uppermost stratum of an ∼6.5-km-long ridge on the mound’s northern flank. Finely layered strata underlie the ridge to the north and have dips consistent with the nearby Mount Sharp sedimentary sequence. Fe-Mg smectites are exposed in a valley to the south of the ridge. Emplacement of the hematite is hypothesized to result either from exposure of anoxic Fe^(2+)-rich groundwater to an oxidizing environment, leading to precipitation of hematite or its precursors, or from in-place weathering of precursor silicate materials under oxidizing conditions. These hypotheses and implications for habitability will be testable with in situ measurements by the Mars rover Curiosity when it reaches Mount Sharp.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Mineralogy of the MSL Curiosity landing site in Gale crater as observed by MRO/CRISM

Kimberly D. Seelos; F. P. Seelos; Christina E. Viviano-Beck; Scott L. Murchie; Raymond E. Arvidson; Bethany L. Ehlmann; A. A. Fraeman

Orbital data acquired by the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) and High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment instruments on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) provide a synoptic view of compositional stratigraphy on the floor of Gale crater surrounding the area where the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) Curiosity landed. Fractured, light-toned material exhibits a 2.2 µm absorption consistent with enrichment in hydroxylated silica. This material may be distal sediment from the Peace Vallis fan, with cement and fracture fill containing the silica. This unit is overlain by more basaltic material, which has 1 µm and 2 µm absorptions due to pyroxene that are typical of Martian basaltic materials. Both materials are partially obscured by aeolian dust and basaltic sand. Dunes to the southeast exhibit differences in mafic mineral signatures, with barchan dunes enhanced in olivine relative to pyroxene-containing longitudinal dunes. This compositional difference may be related to aeolian grain sorting.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Orbital evidence for more widespread carbonate-bearing rocks on Mars

James J. Wray; Scott L. Murchie; Janice L. Bishop; Bethany L. Ehlmann; Ralph E. Milliken; Mary Beth Wilhelm; Kimberly D. Seelos; Matthew Chojnacki

Carbonates are key minerals for understanding ancient Martian environments because they are indicators of potentially habitable, neutral-to-alkaline water and may be an important reservoir for paleoatmospheric CO_2. Previous remote sensing studies have identified mostly Mg-rich carbonates, both in Martian dust and in a Late Noachian rock unit circumferential to the Isidis basin. Here we report evidence for older Fe- and/or Ca-rich carbonates exposed from the subsurface by impact craters and troughs. These carbonates are found in and around the Huygens basin northwest of Hellas, in western Noachis Terra between the Argyre basin and Valles Marineris, and in other isolated locations spread widely across the planet. In all cases they cooccur with or near phyllosilicates, and in Huygens basin specifically they occupy layered rocks exhumed from up to ~5 km depth. We discuss factors that might explain their observed regional distribution, arguments for why carbonates may be even more widespread in Noachian materials than presently appreciated and what could be gained by targeting these carbonates for further study with future orbital or landed missions to Mars.


IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2008

MRO/CRISM Retrieval of Surface Lambert Albedos for Multispectral Mapping of Mars With DISORT-Based Radiative Transfer Modeling: Phase 1—Using Historical Climatology for Temperatures, Aerosol Optical Depths, and Atmospheric Pressures

Patrick C. McGuire; M. J. Wolff; M. D. Smith; Raymond E. Arvidson; Scott L. Murchie; R. T. Clancy; Ted L. Roush; Selby C. Cull; Kimberly Ann Lichtenberg; Sandra Margot Wiseman; Robert O. Green; Terry Z. Martin; Ralph E. Milliken; Peter J. Cavender; David Carl Humm; F. P. Seelos; Kimberly D. Seelos; Howard W. Taylor; B. L. Ehlmann; John F. Mustard; Shannon Pelkey; Timothy N. Titus; C. D. Hash; Erick R. Malaret

We discuss the DISORT-based radiative transfer pipeline (ldquoCRISM_LambertAlbrdquo) for atmospheric and thermal correction of MRO/CRISM data acquired in multispectral mapping mode (~200 m/pixel, 72 spectral channels). Currently, in this phase-one version of the system, we use aerosol optical depths, surface temperatures, and lower atmospheric temperatures, all from climatology derived from Mars Global Surveyor Thermal Emission Spectrometer (MGS-TES) data and from surface altimetry derived from MGS Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA). The DISORT-based model takes the dust and ice aerosol optical depths (scaled to the CRISM wavelength range), the surface pressures (computed from MOLA altimetry, MGS-TES lower atmospheric thermometry, and Viking-based pressure climatology), the surface temperatures, the reconstructed instrumental photometric angles, and the measured I/F spectrum as inputs, and then a Lambertian albedo spectrum is computed as the output. The Lambertian albedo spectrum is valuable geologically because it allows the mineralogical composition to be estimated. Here, I/F is defined as the ratio of the radiance measured by CRISM to the solar irradiance at Mars divided by pi; if there was no martian atmosphere, I/F divided by the cosine of the incidence angle would be equal to the Lambert albedo for a Lambertian surface. After discussing the capabilities and limitations of the pipeline software system, we demonstrate its application on several multispectral data cubes-particularly, the outer reaches of the northern ice cap of Mars, the Tyrrhena Terra area that is northeast of the Hellas basin, and an area near the landing site for the Phoenix mission in the northern plains. For the icy spectra near the northern polar cap, aerosols need to be included in order to properly correct for the CO2 absorption in the H2O ice bands at wavelengths near 2.0 mum. In future phases of software development, we intend to use CRISM data directly in order to retrieve the spatiotemporal maps of aerosol optical depths, surface pressure, and surface temperature. This will allow a second level of refinement in the atmospheric and thermal correction of CRISM multispectral data.


Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets | 2011

Landing site dispersion analysis and statistical assessment for the Mars Phoenix Lander

Eugene Bonfiglio; Douglas S. Adams; Lynn E. Craig; David A. Spencer; William Strauss; F. P. Seelos; Kimberly D. Seelos; Raymond E. Arvidson; Tabatha Heet

The Mars Phoenix Lander launched on August 4, 2007 and successfully landed on Mars 10 months later on May 25, 2008. Landing ellipse predicts and hazard maps were key in selecting safe surface targets for Phoenix. Hazard maps were based on terrain slopes, geomorphology maps and automated rock counts of MROs High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) images. The expected landing dispersion which led to the selection of Phoenixs surface target is discussed as well as the actual landing dispersion predicts determined during operations in the weeks, days, and hours before landing. A statistical assessment of these dispersions is performed, comparing the actual landing-safety probabilities to criteria levied by the project. Also discussed are applications for this statistical analysis which were used by the Phoenix project. These include using the statistical analysis used to verify the effectiveness of a pre-planned maneuver menu and calculating the probability of future maneuvers.


American Mineralogist | 2016

Discovery of alunite in Cross crater, Terra Sirenum, Mars: Evidence for acidic, sulfurous waters

Bethany L. Ehlmann; Gregg A. Swayze; Ralph E. Milliken; John F. Mustard; Roger Nelson Clark; Scott L. Murchie; George N. Breit; James J. Wray; B. Gondet; F. Poulet; John Carter; Wendy M. Calvin; William M. Benzel; Kimberly D. Seelos

Abstract Cross crater is a 65 km impact crater, located in the Noachian highlands of the Terra Sirenum region of Mars (30°S, 158°W), which hosts aluminum phyllosilicate deposits first detected by the Observatoire pour la Minéralogie, L’Eau, les Glaces et l’Activitié (OMEGA) imaging spectrometer on Mars Express. Using high-resolution data from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, we examine Cross crater’s basin-filling sedimentary deposits. Visible/shortwave infrared (VSWIR) spectra from the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) show absorptions diagnostic of alunite. Combining spectral data with high-resolution images, we map a large (10 km × 5 km) alunite-bearing deposit in southwest Cross crater, widespread kaolin-bearing sediments with variable amounts of alunite that are layered in <10 m scale beds, and silica- and/or montmorillonite-bearing deposits that occupy topographically lower, heavily fractured units. The secondary minerals are found at elevations ranging from 700 to 1550 m, forming a discontinuous ring along the crater wall beneath darker capping materials. The mineralogy inside Cross crater is different from that of the surrounding terrains and other martian basins, where Fe/Mg-phyllosilicates and Ca/Mg-sulfates are commonly found. Alunite in Cross crater indicates acidic, sulfurous waters at the time of its formation. Waters in Cross crater were likely supplied by regionally upwelling groundwaters as well as through an inlet valley from a small adjacent depression to the east, perhaps occasionally forming a lake or series of shallow playa lakes in the closed basin. Like nearby Columbus crater, Cross crater exhibits evidence for acid sulfate alteration, but the alteration in Cross is more extensive/complete. The large but localized occurrence of alunite suggests a localized, high-volume source of acidic waters or vapors, possibly supplied by sulfurous (H2S- and/or SO2-bearing) waters in contact with a magmatic source, upwelling steam or fluids through fracture zones. The unique, highly aluminous nature of the Cross crater deposits relative to other martian acid sulfate deposits indicates acid waters, high water throughput during alteration, atypically glassy and/or felsic materials, or a combination of these conditions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kimberly D. Seelos's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Scott L. Murchie

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. P. Seelos

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raymond E. Arvidson

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D.L. Buczkowski

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tabatha Heet

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bethany L. Ehlmann

Environmental Change Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. A. McGovern

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge