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Featured researches published by M. Desnoyer.


Science | 2006

Exposed water ice deposits on the surface of comet 9P/Tempel 1

Jessica M. Sunshine; Michael F. A'Hearn; Olivier Groussin; J.-Y. Li; Michael J. S. Belton; W. A. Delamere; J. Kissel; Kenneth P. Klaasen; Lucy A. McFadden; Karen J. Meech; H. J. Melosh; Peter H. Schultz; Peter C. Thomas; J. Veverka; D. K. Yeomans; I. Busko; M. Desnoyer; Tony L. Farnham; Lori Michelle Feaga; D. L. Hampton; Don J. Lindler; C. M. Lisse; Dennis D. Wellnitz

We report the direct detection of solid water ice deposits exposed on the surface of comet 9P/Tempel 1, as observed by the Deep Impact mission. Three anomalously colored areas are shown to include water ice on the basis of their near-infrared spectra, which include diagnostic water ice absorptions at wavelengths of 1.5 and 2.0 micrometers. These absorptions are well modeled as a mixture of nearby non-ice regions and 3 to 6% water ice particles 10 to 50 micrometers in diameter. These particle sizes are larger than those ejected during the impact experiment, which suggests that the surface deposits are loose aggregates. The total area of exposed water ice is substantially less than that required to support the observed ambient outgassing from the comet, which likely has additional source regions below the surface.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Invited Article: Deep Impact instrument calibration

Kenneth P. Klaasen; Michael F. A’Hearn; Michael Baca; Alan W. Delamere; M. Desnoyer; Tony L. Farnham; Olivier Groussin; D. L. Hampton; Sergei I. Ipatov; Jian-Yang Li; Carey Michael Lisse; Nickolaos Mastrodemos; Stephanie McLaughlin; Jessica M. Sunshine; Peter C. Thomas; Dennis D. Wellnitz

Calibration of NASAs Deep Impact spacecraft instruments allows reliable scientific interpretation of the images and spectra returned from comet Tempel 1. Calibrations of the four onboard remote sensing imaging instruments have been performed in the areas of geometric calibration, spatial resolution, spectral resolution, and radiometric response. Error sources such as noise (random, coherent, encoding, data compression), detector readout artifacts, scattered light, and radiation interactions have been quantified. The point spread functions (PSFs) of the medium resolution instrument and its twin impactor targeting sensor are near the theoretical minimum [ approximately 1.7 pixels full width at half maximum (FWHM)]. However, the high resolution instrument camera was found to be out of focus with a PSF FWHM of approximately 9 pixels. The charge coupled device (CCD) read noise is approximately 1 DN. Electrical cross-talk between the CCD detector quadrants is correctable to <2 DN. The IR spectrometer response nonlinearity is correctable to approximately 1%. Spectrometer read noise is approximately 2 DN. The variation in zero-exposure signal level with time and spectrometer temperature is not fully characterized; currently corrections are good to approximately 10 DN at best. Wavelength mapping onto the detector is known within 1 pixel; spectral lines have a FWHM of approximately 2 pixels. About 1% of the IR detector pixels behave badly and remain uncalibrated. The spectrometer exhibits a faint ghost image from reflection off a beamsplitter. Instrument absolute radiometric calibration accuracies were determined generally to <10% using star imaging. Flat-field calibration reduces pixel-to-pixel response differences to approximately 0.5% for the cameras and <2% for the spectrometer. A standard calibration image processing pipeline is used to produce archival image files for analysis by researchers.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

Deep Impact instrument calibration

Kenneth P. Klaasen; Michael F. A'Hearn; Michael Baca; Alan W. Delamere; M. Desnoyer; Tony L. Farnham; Olivier Groussin; D. L. Hampton; Sergei I. Ipatov; J.-C. Li; Carey Michael Lisse; Nicholas Mastrodemos; Steven W. Mclaughlin; Jessica M. Sunshine; Peter C. Thomas; Dennis D. Wellnitz


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Cruise - Raw Hrii Calib Data V1.0

Stuart McLaughlin; Brian T. Carcich; Thomas K. McCarthy; M. Desnoyer; Kenneth P. Klaasen


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Encounter - Reduced Hrii Spectra V1.0

Stuart McLaughlin; Brian T. Carcich; Thomas K. McCarthy; M. Desnoyer; Kenneth P. Klaasen


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Encounter - Raw its Data V1.0

Stuart McLaughlin; Brian T. Carcich; Thomas K. McCarthy; M. Desnoyer; Kenneth P. Klaasen


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Encounter - Reduced Hriv Images V1.0

Stuart McLaughlin; Brian T. Carcich; Thomas K. McCarthy; M. Desnoyer; Kenneth P. Klaasen


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Encounter - Reduced Hriv Nav Imgs V1.0

Brian T. Carcich; Andrew D. Shaw; M. Desnoyer; Stuart McLaughlin; Nickolaos Mastrodemos; Kenneth P. Klaasen


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Encounter - Raw Hriv Nav Images V1.0

Brian T. Carcich; Andrew D. Shaw; M. Desnoyer; Stuart McLaughlin; Nickolaos Mastrodemos; Kenneth P. Klaasen


Archive | 2010

Deep Impact 9P/TEMPEL Cruise - Raw Hriv Nav Images V1.0

Brian T. Carcich; Andrew D. Shaw; M. Desnoyer; Stuart McLaughlin; Nickolaos Mastrodemos; Kenneth P. Klaasen

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Kenneth P. Klaasen

California Institute of Technology

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Nickolaos Mastrodemos

California Institute of Technology

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D. L. Hampton

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Michael Baca

Science Applications International Corporation

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Carey Michael Lisse

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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D. K. Yeomans

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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