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Featured researches published by Munetaka Ueno.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2018

Ultraviolet imager on Venus orbiter Akatsuki and its initial results

Atsushi Yamazaki; Manabu Yamada; Yeon Joo Lee; S. Watanabe; Takeshi Horinouchi; Shin Ya Murakami; Toru Kouyama; Kazunori Ogohara; Takeshi Imamura; Takao M. Sato; Yukio Yamamoto; Tetsuya Fukuhara; Hiroki Ando; Ko Ichiro Sugiyama; Seiko Takagi; Hiroki Kashimura; Shoko Ohtsuki; Naru Hirata; George Hashimoto; Makoto Suzuki; Chikako Hirose; Munetaka Ueno; Takehiko Satoh; Takumi Abe; Nobuaki Ishii; Masato Nakamura

AbstractnThe ultraviolet imager (UVI) has been developed for the Akatsuki spacecraft (Venus Climate Orbiter mission). The UVI takes ultraviolet (UV) images of the solar radiation reflected by the Venusian clouds with narrow bandpass filters centered at the 283 and 365xa0nm wavelengths. There are absorption bands of SO2 and unknown absorbers in these wavelength regions. The UV images provide the spatial distribution of SO2 and the unknown absorber around cloud top altitudes. The images also allow us to understand the cloud top morphologies and haze properties. Nominal sequential images with 2-h intervals are used to understand the dynamics of the Venusian atmosphere by estimating the wind vectors at the cloud top altitude, as well as the mass transportation of UV absorbers. The UVI is equipped with off-axial catadioptric optics, two bandpass filters, a diffuser installed in a filter wheel moving with a step motor, and a high sensitivity charge-coupled device with UV coating. The UVI images have spatial resolutions ranging from 200xa0m to 86xa0km at sub-spacecraft points. The UVI has been kept in good condition during the extended interplanetary cruise by carefully designed operations that have maintained its temperature maintenance and avoided solar radiation damage. The images have signal-to-noise ratios of over 100 after onboard desmear processing.n


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Topographical and Local Time Dependence of Large Stationary Gravity Waves Observed at the Cloud Top of Venus

Toru Kouyama; Takeshi Imamura; Makoto Taguchi; Tetsuya Fukuhara; Takao M. Sato; Atsushi Yamazaki; Masahiko Futaguchi; Shin-ya Murakami; George Hashimoto; Munetaka Ueno; Naomoto Iwagami; Shohgo Takagi; Masahiro Takagi; Kazunori Ogohara; Hiroki Kashimura; Takeshi Horinouchi; Naoki Sato; Manabu Yamada; Yukio Yamamoto; Shoko Ohtsuki; Ko-ichiro Sugiyama; H. Ando; Mao Takamura; Takeru Yamada; Takehiko Satoh; Masato Nakamura

The existence of large stationary gravity waves was discovered during Akatsukis first observation sequence in 2015. In this study, the further detection of large stationary gravity waves in brightness temperature images over a 1.5xa0year period is reported. The waves periodically appeared mostly above four specific highland regions in the low latitudes when these regions were in the local afternoon. The wave amplitudes attenuated after the wave locations passed beyond the evening terminator, and the locations of the waves tended to slowly drift eastward over their lifetimes. The appearances of stationary waves depend not only on surface topography but also on latitude and local time, suggesting that solar heating during the daytime and atmospheric structure affected by solar heating may control the excitation and propagation of stationary waves.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2017

Performance of Akatsuki/IR2 in Venus orbit: the first year

Takehiko Satoh; Takao M. Sato; Masato Nakamura; Yasumasa Kasaba; Munetaka Ueno; Makoto Suzuki; George Hashimoto; Takeshi Horinouchi; Takeshi Imamura; Atsushi Yamazaki; Takayuki Enomoto; Yuri Sakurai; Kosuke Takami; Kenta Sawai; Takashi Nakakushi; Takumi Abe; Nobuaki Ishii; Chikako Hirose; Naru Hirata; Manabu Yamada; Shin Ya Murakami; Yukio Yamamoto; Tetsuya Fukuhara; Kazunori Ogohara; Hiroki Ando; Ko Ichiro Sugiyama; Hiroki Kashimura; Shoko Ohtsuki

The first year (December 2015 to November 2016) of IR2 after Akatsuki’s successful insertion to an elongated elliptical orbit around Venus is reported with performance evaluation and results of data acquisition. The single-stage Stirling-cycle cryo-cooler of IR2 has been operated with various driving voltages to achieve the best possible cooling under the given thermal environment. A total of 3091 images of Venus (1420 dayside images at 2.02xa0μm and 1671 night-side images at 1.735, 2.26, and 2.32xa0μm) were acquired in this period. Additionally, 159 images, including images of stars for calibration and dark images for the evaluation of noise levels, were captured. Low-frequency flat images (not available in pre-launch calibration data) have been constructed using the images of Venus acquired from near the pericenter to establish the procedure to correct for the IR2 flat-field response. It was noticed that multiple reflections of infrared light in the PtSi detector caused a weak but extended tail of the point-spread function (PSF), contaminating the night-side disk of Venus with light from the much brighter dayside crescent. This necessitated the construction of an empirical PSF to remove this contamination and also to improve the dayside data by deconvolution, and this work is also discussed. Detailed astrometry is performed on star-field images in the H-band (1.65xa0μm), hereby confirming that the geometrical distortion of IR2 images is negligible.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2017

Absolute calibration of brightness temperature of the Venus disk observed by the Longwave Infrared Camera onboard Akatsuki

Tetsuya Fukuhara; Makoto Taguchi; Takeshi Imamura; Akane Hayashitani; Takeru Yamada; Masahiko Futaguchi; Toru Kouyama; Takao M. Sato; Mao Takamura; Naomoto Iwagami; Masato Nakamura; Makoto Suzuki; Munetaka Ueno; George Hashimoto; Mitsuteru Sato; Seiko Takagi; Atsushi Yamazaki; Manabu Yamada; Shin Ya Murakami; Yukio Yamamoto; Kazunori Ogohara; Hiroki Ando; Ko Ichiro Sugiyama; Hiroki Kashimura; Shoko Ohtsuki; Nobuaki Ishii; Takumi Abe; Takehiko Satoh; Chikako Hirose; Naru Hirata

The Venus Climate Orbiter Akatsuki arrived at Venus in December 2015, and the Longwave Infrared Camera (LIR) onboard the spacecraft started making observations. LIR has acquired more than 8000 images during the first two Venusian years since orbit insertion without any serious faults. However, brightness temperature derived from LIR images contained an unexpected bias that related not to natural phenomena but to a thermal condition of the instrument. The bias could be partially eliminated by keeping the power supply unit for LIR always active, while the residual bias was simply correlated with the baffle temperature. Therefore, deep-space images were acquired at different baffle temperatures on orbit, and a reference table for eliminating the bias from images was prepared. In the corrected images, the brightness temperature was ~xa0230xa0K at the center of the Venus disk, where the effect of limb darkening is negligible. The result is independent of the baffle temperature and consistent with the results of previous studies. Later, a laboratory experiment with the proto model of LIR showed that when the germanium (Ge) lens was heated, its actual temperature was slightly higher than the temperature measured by a thermal sensor attached to the lens holder. The experiment confirmed that transitory baffle heating accounted for the background bias found in the brightness temperature observed by LIR.


Archive | 2011

Noble Gases Recovered from the Hayabusa Sample Container

Ryuji Okazaki; Katashi Nagao; Yayoi N. Miura; Takahito Osawa; Ken-ichi Bajo; Sumio Matsuda; Toru M. Nakamura; Kiyoaki Shirai; Masanao Abe; Tetsushi Yada; T. Noguchi; Yutaka Ishibashi; Akio Fujimura; Toshiharu Mukai; Munetaka Ueno; Takashi Okada; Makoto Yoshikawa; Junichiro Kawaguchi


Archive | 2012

The Shock State of Itokawa Sample

Michael E. Zolensky; Tomoki Nakamura; Takashi Mikouchi; Kenji Hagiya; Kazumasa Ohsumi; Masahiko Tanaka; Makoto Kimura; Akira Tsuchiyama; Aiko Nakato; Toshihiro Ogami; Hatsumi Ishida; Masayuki Uesugi; Toru Yada; Kei Shirai; Akio Fujimura; Ryuji Okazaki; Yukihiro Ishibashi; Masanao Abe; Tatsuaki Okada; Munetaka Ueno; Toshinori Mukai; Makoto Yoshikawa; Junichiro Kawaguchi


한국천문학회보 | 2007

Observational Study of Cometary Gravels Injection Around the Terrestrial Orbit

Masateru Ishiguro; Yuki Sarugaku; Munetaka Ueno


Archive | 2013

探査機「はやぶさ」が持ち帰った小惑星イトカワ粒子の初期記載について

達 矢田; 正真 安部; 達明 岡田; 智樹 中村; 高明 野口; 隆司 岡崎; 之宏 石橋; 慶 白井; 真之 上椙; 譲 唐牛; 彰吾 八亀; 宗孝 上野; 利典 向井; 真 吉川; 淳 川口; 彰夫 藤村; Toru Yada; Masanao Abe; Tatsuaki Okada; Tomoki Nakamura; Takaaki Noguchi; Ryuji Okazaki; Yukihiro Ishibashi; Kei Shirai; Masayuki Uesugi; Yuzuru Karouji; Shogo Yakame; Munetaka Ueno; Toshifumi Mukai; Makoto Yoshikawa


한국천문학회보 | 2012

High-Resolution Map of Zodiacal Dust Bands by WIZARD

Hongu Yang; Masateru Ishiguro; Fumihiko Usui; Munetaka Ueno


한국암석학회 학술발표회 논문집 | 2012

Space environment and evolution of an asteroid revealed from an initial analysis of micro-grain particles returned by Hayabusa spacecraft

Eizo Nakamura; Akio Makishima; Takuya Moriguti; Katsura Kobayashi; Ryoji Tanaka; Tak Kunihiro; Tatsuki Tsujimori; Chie Sakaguchi; Hiroshi Kitagawa; Tsutomu Ota; Yusuke Yachi; Toru Yada; Masanao Abe; Akio Fujimura; Munetaka Ueno; T. Mukai; Makoto Yoshikawa; Jun’ichiro Kawaguchi

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Takehiko Satoh

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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宗孝 上野

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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