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Dive into the research topics where Linda J. Spilker is active.

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Featured researches published by Linda J. Spilker.


Nature | 2004

An intense stratospheric jet on Jupiter.

F. M. Flasar; V. G. Kunde; R. K. Achterberg; Barney J. Conrath; A. A. Simon-Miller; C. A. Nixon; P. J. Gierasch; P. N. Romani; B. Bézard; Patrick G. J. Irwin; Gordon L. Bjoraker; John C. Brasunas; D. E. Jennings; J. C. Pearl; M. D. Smith; Glenn S. Orton; Linda J. Spilker; R. Carlson; Simon B. Calcutt; P. L. Read; F. W. Taylor; P. Parrish; A. Barucci; Régis Courtin; Athena Coustenis; Daniel Gautier; E. Lellouch; A. Marten; R. Prangé; Y. Biraud

The Earths equatorial stratosphere shows oscillations in which the east–west winds reverse direction and the temperatures change cyclically with a period of about two years. This phenomenon, called the quasi-biennial oscillation, also affects the dynamics of the mid- and high-latitude stratosphere and weather in the lower atmosphere. Ground-based observations have suggested that similar temperature oscillations (with a 4–5-yr cycle) occur on Jupiter, but these data suffer from poor vertical resolution and Jupiters stratospheric wind velocities have not yet been determined. Here we report maps of temperatures and winds with high spatial resolution, obtained from spacecraft measurements of infrared spectra of Jupiters stratosphere. We find an intense, high-altitude equatorial jet with a speed of ∼140 m s-1, whose spatial structure resembles that of a quasi-quadrennial oscillation. Wave activity in the stratosphere also appears analogous to that occurring on Earth. A strong interaction between Jupiter and its plasma environment produces hot spots in its upper atmosphere and stratosphere near its poles, and the temperature maps define the penetration of the hot spots into the stratosphere.


SPIE's 1996 International Symposium on Optical Science, Engineering, and Instrumentation | 1996

Cassini infrared Fourier spectroscopic investigation

Virgil G. Kunde; Peter A. R. Ade; Richard D. Barney; D. Bergman; Jean-Francois Bonnal; R. Borelli; David Boyd; John C. Brasunas; Gregory Vallee Brown; Simon B. Calcutt; F. Carroll; R. Courtin; Jacky B. Cretolle; Julie A. Crooke; Martin A. Davis; S. Edberg; Rainer K. Fettig; M. Flasar; David A. Glenar; S. Graham; John G. Hagopian; Claef Hakun; Patricia Ann Hayes; L. Herath; Linda J. Spilker; Donald E. Jennings; Gabriel Karpati; C. Kellebenz; Brook Lakew; J. Lindsay

The composite infrared spectrometer (CIRS) is a remote sensing instrument to be flown on the Cassini orbiter. CIRS will retrieve vertical profiles of temperature and gas composition for the atmospheres of Titan and Saturn, from deep in their tropospheres to high in their stratospheres. CIRS will also retrieve information on the thermal properties and composition of Saturns rings and Saturnian satellites. CIRS consists of a pair of Fourier Transform Spectrometers (FTSs) which together cover the spectral range from 10-1400 cm-1 with a spectral resolution up to 0.5 cm-1. The two interferometers share a 50 cm beryllium Cassegrain telescope. The far-infrared FTS is a polarizing interferometer covering the 10-600 cm-1 range with a pair of thermopile detectors, and a 3.9 mrad field of view. The mid-infrared FTS is a conventional Michelson interferometer covering 200-1400 cm-1 in two spectral bandpasses: 600-1100 cm- 1100-1400 cm(superscript -1 with a 1 by 10 photovoltaic HgCdTe array. Each pixel of the arrays has an approximate 0.3 mrad field of view. The HgCdTe arrays are cooled to approximately 80K with a passive radiative cooler.


Space Science Reviews | 2003

The Cassini/Huygens Mission to the Saturnian System

Dennis L. Matson; Linda J. Spilker; Jean-Pierre Lebreton

The international Cassini/Huygens mission consists of the Cassini SaturnOrbiter spacecraft and the Huygens Titan Probe that is targeted for entry into the atmosphere of Saturns largest moon, Titan. From launch on October 15, 1997 to arrival at Saturn in July 2004, Cassini/Huygens will travel over three billion kilometers. Once in orbit about Saturn, Huygens is released from the orbiter and enters Titans atmosphere. The Probe descends by parachute and measures the properties of the atmosphere. If the landing is gentle, the properties of the surface will be measured too. Then the orbiter commences a four-year tour of the Saturnian system with 45 flybys of Titan and multiple encounters with the icy moons. The rings, the magnetosphere and Saturn itself are all studied as well as the interactions among them.


Archive | 2009

Ring Particle Composition and Size Distribution

Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; R.N. Clark; G. Filacchione; Richard G. French; Robert E. Johnson; Essam A. Marouf; Linda J. Spilker

We review recent progress concerning the composition and size distribution of the particles in Saturns main ring system, and describe how these properties vary from place to place. We discuss how the particle size distribution is measured, and how it varies radially. We note the discovery of unusually large “particles” in restricted radial bands. We discuss the properties of the grainy regoliths of the ring particles. We review advances in understanding of ring particle composition from spectrophotometry at UV, visual and near-IR wavelengths, multicolor photometry at visual wavelengths, and thermal emission. We discuss the observed ring atmosphere and its interpretation and, briefly, models of the evolution of ring composition. We connect the ring composition with what has been learned recently about the composition of other icy objects in the Saturn system and beyond. Because the rings are so thoroughly and rapidly structurally evolved, the composition of the rings may be our best clue as to their origin; however, the evolution of ring particle composition over time must first be understood.


Science | 2010

An Evolving View of Saturn’s Dynamic Rings

Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; Joseph A. Burns; Sebastien Charnoz; R.N. Clark; Josh Colwell; Luke Dones; Larry W. Esposito; G. Filacchione; Richard G. French; Matthew Mckay Hedman; Sascha Kempf; Essam A. Marouf; Carl D. Murray; P. D. Nicholson; Carolyn C. Porco; Juergen Schmidt; Mark R. Showalter; Linda J. Spilker; Joseph Nicholas Spitale; Ralf Srama; Miodrag Sremcevic; Matthew S. Tiscareno; John Wilfred Weiss

Saturns Secrets Probed The Cassini spacecraft was launched on 15 October 1997. It took it almost 7 years to reach Saturn, the second-largest planet in the solar system. After almost 6 years of observations of the series of interacting moons, rings, and magnetospheric plasmas, known as the Kronian system, Cuzzi et al. (p. 1470) review our current understanding of Saturns rings—the most extensive and complex in the solar system—and draw parallels with circumstellar disks. Gombosi and Ingersoll (p. 1476; see the cover) review what is known about Saturns atmosphere, ionosphere, and magnetosphere. We review our understanding of Saturn’s rings after nearly 6 years of observations by the Cassini spacecraft. Saturn’s rings are composed mostly of water ice but also contain an undetermined reddish contaminant. The rings exhibit a range of structure across many spatial scales; some of this involves the interplay of the fluid nature and the self-gravity of innumerable orbiting centimeter- to meter-sized particles, and the effects of several peripheral and embedded moonlets, but much remains unexplained. A few aspects of ring structure change on time scales as short as days. It remains unclear whether the vigorous evolutionary processes to which the rings are subject imply a much younger age than that of the solar system. Processes on view at Saturn have parallels in circumstellar disks.


Space Science Reviews | 2003

SATURN'S RINGS: PRE-CASSINI STATUS AND MISSION GOALS

Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; Joshua E. Colwell; Larry W. Esposito; Carolyn C. Porco; Carl D. Murray; P. D. Nicholson; Linda J. Spilker; Essam A. Marouf; R.C. French; Nicole J. Rappaport; D. Muhleman

Theoretical and observational progress in studies of Saturns ring system since the mid-1980s is reviewed, focussing on advances in configuration and dynamics, composition and size distribution, dust and meteoroids, interactions of the rings with the planet and the magnetosphere, and relationships between the rings and various satellites. The Cassini instrument suite of greatest relevance to ring studies is also summarized, emphasizing how the individual instruments might work together to solve outstanding problems. The Cassini tour is described from the standpoint of ring studies, and major ring science goals are summarized.


ieee aerospace conference | 2016

Enceladus Life Finder: The search for life in a habitable Moon

K. Reh; Linda J. Spilker; Jonathan I. Lunine; J. Hunter Waite; Morgan L. Cable; Frank Postberg; Karla Clark

Enceladus is one of the most intriguing bodies in the solar system. In addition to having one of the brightest and youngest surfaces, this small Saturnian moon was recently discovered to have a plume erupting from its south polar terrain and a global subsurface ocean. The Cassini Mission discovered organics and nitrogen-bearing molecules in the plume, as well as salts and silicates that strongly suggest ocean water in contact with a rocky core. However, Cassinis instruments lack sufficient resolution and mass range to determine if these organics are of biotic origin. The Enceladus Life Finder (ELF) is a Discovery-class mission that would use two state-of-the-art mass spectrometers to target the gas and grains of the plume and search for evidence of life in this alien ocean.


Applied Optics | 2017

Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) on Cassini

Donald E. Jennings; F. M. Flasar; V. G. Kunde; Conor A. Nixon; Marcia Segura; P. N. Romani; Nicolas Gorius; S. A. Albright; John C. Brasunas; R. C. Carlson; A. A. Mamoutkine; E. Guandique; M. S. Kaelberer; Shahid Aslam; Richard Karl Achterberg; Gordon L. Bjoraker; Carrie M. Anderson; V. Cottini; John C. Pearl; M. D. Smith; B. E. Hesman; Richard D. Barney; Simon B. Calcutt; Tim Vellacott; Linda J. Spilker; S. Edgington; S. M. Brooks; Peter A. R. Ade; Paul J. Schinder; Athena Coustenis

The Cassini spacecraft orbiting Saturn carries the composite infrared spectrometer (CIRS) designed to study thermal emission from Saturn and its rings and moons. CIRS, a Fourier transform spectrometer, is an indispensable part of the payload providing unique measurements and important synergies with the other instruments. It takes full advantage of Cassinis 13-year-long mission and surpasses the capabilities of previous spectrometers on Voyager 1 and 2. The instrument, consisting of two interferometers sharing a telescope and a scan mechanism, covers over a factor of 100 in wavelength in the mid and far infrared. It is used to study temperature, composition, structure, and dynamics of the atmospheres of Jupiter, Saturn, and Titan, the rings of Saturn, and surfaces of the icy moons. CIRS has returned a large volume of scientific results, the culmination of over 30 years of instrument development, operation, data calibration, and analysis. As Cassini and CIRS reach the end of their mission in 2017, we expect that archived spectra will be used by scientists for many years to come.


Icarus | 2016

Incomplete cooling down of Saturn’s A ring at solar equinox: Implication for seasonal thermal inertia and internal structure of ring particles

Ryuji Morishima; Linda J. Spilker; Shawn Brooks; Estelle Deau; Stu Pilorz

Abstract At the solar equinox in August 2009, the Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) onboard Cassini showed the lowest Saturn’s ring temperatures ever observed. Detailed radiative transfer models show that the observed equinox temperatures of Saturn’s A ring are much higher than model predictions as long as only the flux from Saturn is taken into account. In addition, the post-equinox temperatures are lower than the pre-equinox temperatures at the same absolute solar elevation angle. These facts indicate that the A ring was not completely cooled down at the equinox and that it is possible to give constraints on the size and seasonal thermal inertia of ring particles using seasonal temperature variations around the equinox. We develop a simple seasonal model for ring temperatures and first assume that the internal density and the thermal inertia of a ring particle are uniform with depth. The particle size is estimated to be 1–2 m. The seasonal thermal inertia is found to be 30–50 J m−2 K−1 s−1/2 in the middle A ring whereas it is ∼10 J m−2 K−1 s−1/2 or as low as the diurnal thermal inertia in the inner and outermost regions of the A ring. An additional internal structure model, in which a particle has a high density core surrounded by a fluffy regolith mantle, shows that the core radius relative to the particle radius is about 0.9 for the middle A ring and is much less for the inner and outer regions of the A ring. This means that the radial variation of the internal density of ring particles exists across the A ring. Some mechanisms may be confining dense particles in the middle A ring against viscous diffusion. Alternatively, the (middle) A ring might have recently formed (<108 yr) by destruction of an icy satellite, so that dense particles have not yet diffused over the A ring and regolith mantles of particles have not grown thick. Our model results also indicate that the composition of the core is predominantly water ice, not rock.


Access Science | 2006

Cassini-Huygens mission

Trina L. Ray; Linda J. Spilker; Claudio Sollazzo

The international Cassini-Huygens spacecraft was launched on October 15, 1997, on a 7-year 3-billion…

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Stuart Pilorz

California Institute of Technology

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Scott G. Edgington

California Institute of Technology

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Brad D. Wallis

California Institute of Technology

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Alberto Flandes

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Dennis L. Matson

United States Geological Survey

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F. Michael Flasar

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Conor A. Nixon

Goddard Space Flight Center

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