Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where O. Ruesch is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by O. Ruesch.


Science | 2016

Dawn Arrives at Ceres: Exploration of a Small Volatile-Rich World

C. T. Russell; C.A. Raymond; E. Ammannito; D.L. Buczkowski; M.C. De Sanctis; Harald Hiesinger; R. Jaumann; Alexander S. Konopliv; Harry Y. McSween; A. Nathues; Ryan S. Park; Carle M. Pieters; T.H. Prettyman; T. B. McCord; L. A. McFadden; S. Mottola; Maria T. Zuber; Steven Peter Joy; C. Polanskey; Marc D. Rayman; Julie C. Castillo-Rogez; P. J. Chi; J.-P. Combe; A. I. Ermakov; Roger R. Fu; M. Hoffmann; Y. D. Jia; Scott D. King; D. J. Lawrence; J.-Y. Li

On 6 March 2015, Dawn arrived at Ceres to find a dark, desiccated surface punctuated by small, bright areas. Parts of Ceres’ surface are heavily cratered, but the largest expected craters are absent. Ceres appears gravitationally relaxed at only the longest wavelengths, implying a mechanically strong lithosphere with a weaker deep interior. Ceres’ dry exterior displays hydroxylated silicates, including ammoniated clays of endogenous origin. The possibility of abundant volatiles at depth is supported by geomorphologic features such as flat crater floors with pits, lobate flows of materials, and a singular mountain that appears to be an extrusive cryovolcanic dome. On one occasion, Ceres temporarily interacted with the solar wind, producing a bow shock accelerating electrons to energies of tens of kilovolts.


Nature | 2013

Olivine in an unexpected location on Vesta’s surface

E. Ammannito; M.C. De Sanctis; E. Palomba; A. Longobardo; D. W. Mittlefehldt; Harry Y. McSween; S. Marchi; M. T. Capria; F. Capaccioni; A. Frigeri; Carle M. Pieters; O. Ruesch; F. Tosi; F. Zambon; F. Carraro; S. Fonte; Harald Hiesinger; G. Magni; Lucy A. McFadden; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell; Jessica M. Sunshine

Olivine is a major component of the mantle of differentiated bodies, including Earth. Howardite, eucrite and diogenite (HED) meteorites represent regolith, basaltic-crust, lower-crust and possibly ultramafic-mantle samples of asteroid Vesta, which is the lone surviving, large, differentiated, basaltic rocky protoplanet in the Solar System. Only a few of these meteorites, the orthopyroxene-rich diogenites, contain olivine, typically with a concentration of less than 25 per cent by volume. Olivine was tentatively identified on Vesta, on the basis of spectral and colour data, but other observations did not confirm its presence. Here we report that olivine is indeed present locally on Vesta’s surface but that, unexpectedly, it has not been found within the deep, south-pole basins, which are thought to be excavated mantle rocks. Instead, it occurs as near-surface materials in the northern hemisphere. Unlike the meteorites, the olivine-rich (more than 50 per cent by volume) material is not associated with diogenite but seems to be mixed with howardite, the most common surface material. Olivine is exposed in crater walls and in ejecta scattered diffusely over a broad area. The size of the olivine exposures and the absence of associated diogenite favour a mantle source, but the exposures are located far from the deep impact basins. The amount and distribution of observed olivine-rich material suggest a complex evolutionary history for Vesta.


Science | 2016

Cratering on Ceres: Implications for its crust and evolution

Harald Hiesinger; S. Marchi; N. Schmedemann; Paul M. Schenk; J. H. Pasckert; Adrian Neesemann; David Patrick O'Brien; T. Kneissl; A. I. Ermakov; Roger R. Fu; Michael T. Bland; A. Nathues; Thomas Platz; David A. Williams; R. Jaumann; Julie C. Castillo-Rogez; O. Ruesch; Britney E. Schmidt; Ryan S. Park; Frank Preusker; D.L. Buczkowski; C. T. Russell; C.A. Raymond

INTRODUCTION Thermochemical models have predicted that the dwarf planet Ceres has, to some extent, formed a mantle. Moreover, due to viscous relaxation, these models indicate that Ceres should have an icy crust with few or no impact craters. However, the Dawn spacecraft has shown that Ceres has elevation excursions of ~15 km, cliffs, graben, steep-sided mountains, and a heavily cratered surface. RATIONALE We used Dawn’s Framing Camera to study the morphology, size frequency, and spatial distribution of the craters on Ceres. These data allow us to infer the structure and evolution of Ceres’ outer shell. RESULTS A large variety of crater morphologies are present on Ceres, including bowl-shaped craters, polygonal craters, floor-fractured craters, terraces, central peaks, smooth floors, flowlike features, bright spots, secondary craters, and crater chains. The morphology of some impact craters is consistent with water ice in the subsurface. Although this might have favored relaxation, there are also large unrelaxed craters. The transition from bowl-shaped simple craters to modified complex craters occurs at diameters of about 7.5 to 12 km. Craters larger than 300 km are absent, but low-pass filtering of the digital elevation model suggests the existence of two quasi-circular depressions with diameters of ~570 km (125.56°E and 19.60°N) and ~830 km (24.76°W and 0.5°N). Craters are heterogeneously distributed across Ceres’ surface, with more craters in the northern versus the southern hemisphere. The lowest crater densities are associated with large, well-preserved southern hemisphere impact craters such as Urvara and Yalode. Because the low crater density (LCD) terrain extends across a large latitude range in some cases (e.g., Urvara and Yalode: ~18°N and 75°S; Kerwan: ~30°N and 46°S), its spatial distribution is inconsistent with simple relaxation driven by warmer equatorial temperatures. We instead propose that impact-driven resurfacing is the more likely LCD formation process, although we cannot completely rule out an internal (endogenic) origin. We applied two different methodologies to derive absolute model ages from observed crater size-frequency distributions. The lunar-derived model adapts the lunar production and chronology functions to impact conditions on Ceres, taking into account impact velocities, projectile densities, current collision probabilities, and surface gravity. The asteroid-derived model derives a production function by scaling the directly observed object size-frequency distribution from the main asteroid belt (extended to sizes <5 km by a collisional model) to the resulting size-frequency distribution of cerean craters, using similar cerean target parameters as the lunar-derived model. By dating a smooth region associated with the Kerwan crater, we determined absolute model ages of 550 million and 720 million years, depending on which chronology model is applied. CONCLUSION Crater morphology and the simple-to-complex crater transition indicate that Ceres’ outer shell is likely neither pure ice nor pure rock but an ice-rock mixture that allows for limited relaxation. The heterogeneous crater distribution across the surface indicates crustal heterogeneities and a complex geologic evolution of Ceres. There is evidence for at least some geologic activity occurring in Ceres’ recent history. Spatial density of craters larger than 20 km on Ceres. Crater rims are shown as black solid circles. Blue indicates areas with LCDs; yellow and red represent more highly cratered areas. The smallest dashed ellipse denotes the idealized former rim of an extremely degraded impact crater at 48.9°E and 44.9°S, which is barely recognizable in imagery but apparent from the global digital elevation model. Also shown as dashed circles are the outlines of two large putative basins. Unambiguously recognized basins >300 km in diameter are missing, and there are several areas with LCDs associated with large impact craters (e.g., Yalode, Urvara, Kerwan, Ezinu, Vinotonus, Dantu, and two unnamed craters northeast and southeast of Oxo). Areas A and B are topographic rises with central depressions that also show LCDs. Thermochemical models have predicted that Ceres, is to some extent, differentiated and should have an icy crust with few or no impact craters. We present observations by the Dawn spacecraft that reveal a heavily cratered surface, a heterogeneous crater distribution, and an apparent absence of large craters. The morphology of some impact craters is consistent with ice in the subsurface, which might have favored relaxation, yet large unrelaxed craters are also present. Numerous craters exhibit polygonal shapes, terraces, flowlike features, slumping, smooth deposits, and bright spots. Crater morphology and simple-to-complex crater transition diameters indicate that the crust of Ceres is neither purely icy nor rocky. By dating a smooth region associated with the Kerwan crater, we determined absolute model ages (AMAs) of 550 million and 720 million years, depending on the applied chronology model.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Detections and geologic context of local enrichments in olivine on Vesta with VIR/Dawn data

O. Ruesch; Harald Hiesinger; Maria Cristina de Sanctis; E. Ammannito; E. Palomba; A. Longobardo; F. Zambon; F. Tosi; M. T. Capria; F. Capaccioni; A. Frigeri; S. Fonte; G. Magni; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell

The magmatism characterizing the early history of the asteroid Vesta has long been investigated with the mafic and ultramafic meteorites howardite, eucrite, and diogenite (HED). The lack of geologic context for the meteorites, however, has limited its understanding. Here we use the visible to near-IR (VIR) orbital observations of Vestas surface to detect relative enrichments in olivine and to study the associated geologic features. Because the near-IR signature of olivine on Vestas surface is subtle relative to the widespread pyroxene absorption bands, a method was developed to distinguish olivine enrichments from admixture of pyroxenes with high Fe2+/M1, dark material, and potential Fe-bearing glass. Relative enrichment of olivine (~<50–60 vol %) is found in 2–5 km wide, morphologically fresh areas. Our global survey reveals a dozen of these areas clustering in the eastern hemisphere of Vesta. The hemispherical coincidence with a widespread, low enrichment in diogenite-like pyroxene suggests the presence of a distinct compositional terrain. On the central mound of the Rheasilvia impact basin, no olivine enrichment was found, suggesting the absence of an olivine-dominated mantle above the basins excavation depth or, alternatively, a low amount of olivine homogeneously mixed with diogenite-like pyroxenes. Rare olivine-enriched areas in close proximity to diogenite-like pyroxene are found as part of material ejected by the Rheasilvia impact. Such cooccurrence is reminiscent of local, ultramafic lithologies within the crust. The possible formation of such lithologies on Vesta is supported by some HED meteorites dominated by olivine and orthopyroxene.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

The vanishing cryovolcanoes of Ceres

Michael M. Sori; Shane Byrne; Michael T. Bland; Ali M. Bramson; A. I. Ermakov; Christopher W. Hamilton; Katharina A. Otto; O. Ruesch; C. T. Russell

Ahuna Mons is a 4-km-tall mountain on Ceres interpreted as a geologically young cryovolcanic dome. Other possible cryovolcanic features are more ambiguous, implying that cryovolcanism is only a recent phenomenon or that other cryovolcanic structures have been modified beyond easy identification. We test the hypothesis that Cerean cryovolcanic domes viscously relax, precluding ancient domes from recognition. We use numerical models to predict flow velocities of Ahuna Mons to be 10–500 m/Myr, depending upon assumptions about ice content, rheology, grain size, and thermal parameters. Slower flow rates in this range are sufficiently fast to induce extensive relaxation of cryovolcanic structures over 108–109 years, but gradual enough for Ahuna Mons to remain identifiable today. Positive topographic features, including a tholus underlying Ahuna Mons, may represent relaxed cryovolcanic structures. A composition for Ahuna Mons of >40% ice explains the observed distribution of cryovolcanic structures because viscous relaxation renders old cryovolcanoes unrecognizable.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Small fresh impact craters on asteroid 4 Vesta: A compositional and geological fingerprint

K. Stephan; R. Jaumann; M.C. De Sanctis; F. Tosi; E. Ammannito; K. Krohn; F. Zambon; S. Marchi; O. Ruesch; Klaus-Dieter Matz; Frank Preusker; Thomas Roatsch; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell

Small morphologically fresh impact craters (<10 km in diameter) on Vestas surface with a photometrically distinct ejecta blanket are expected to represent fresh surface material and thus provide the opportunity to study the composition of the unweathered surface. Dawn-Framing Camera and Visual and Infrared Spectrometer (VIR) data reveal impact craters with bright, dark, and mixed, i.e., partly bright and dark, ejecta existing on Vestas surface, which not only differ in the visible albedo from their surroundings but also in their composition. Differences in the composition are related to the visible albedo and/or the geographic location of the impact craters. Bright ejecta, only seen in the southern Vestan hemisphere, are dominated by howardite/eucrite-like material as expected for Vestas upper crust. Dark ejecta associated with dark impact craters are dominated by a strongly absorbing, spectrally neutral compound, supporting an origin from carbon-rich impactors. Few impact craters of intermediate albedo in Vestas southern hemisphere contain material resembling diogenites, which are expected to exist in the deeper parts of Vestas interior. The geological settings suggest that the diogenite-like material represents a part of a layer of diogenitic material surrounding the Rheasilvia basin or local concentrations of diogenitic material as part of the ejecta excavated during the latter stage of the Rheasilvia impact event. The spectral differences between eucrite- and diogenite-dominated materials also could be verified due to spin-forbidden absorptions in the visible spectral range, which are known from laboratory spectra of pyroxenes, but, which have been identified in the VIR spectra of Vesta for the first time.


Planetary and Space Science | 2014

The cratering record, chronology and surface ages of (4) Vesta in comparison to smaller asteroids and the ages of HED meteorites

N. Schmedemann; T. Kneissl; Boris A. Ivanov; Gregory Michael; Roland Wagner; Gerhard Neukum; O. Ruesch; Harald Hiesinger; Katrin Krohn; Thomas Roatsch; Frank Preusker; H. Sierks; R. Jaumann; Vishnu Reddy; A. Nathues; S. Walter; Adrian Neesemann; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell


Icarus | 2015

Present-day seasonal gully activity in a south polar pit (Sisyphi Cavi) on Mars

J. Raack; Dennis Reiss; Thomas Appéré; Mathieu Vincendon; O. Ruesch; Harald Hiesinger


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Compositional investigation of the proposed chloride‐bearing materials on Mars using near‐infrared orbital data from OMEGA/MEx

O. Ruesch; F. Poulet; Mathieu Vincendon; Jean-Pierre Bibring; John Carter; G. Erkeling; B. Gondet; Harald Hiesinger; Anouck Ody; Dennis Reiss


Icarus | 2014

Geologic map of the northern hemisphere of Vesta based on Dawn Framing Camera (FC) images

O. Ruesch; Harald Hiesinger; David T. Blewett; David A. Williams; D.L. Buczkowski; Jennifer E.C. Scully; R. Aileen Yingst; Thomas Roatsch; Frank Preusker; R. Jaumann; C. T. Russell; C.A. Raymond

Collaboration


Dive into the O. Ruesch's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. T. Russell

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C.A. Raymond

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
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

R. Jaumann

German Aerospace Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T. Kneissl

Free University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas Platz

Free University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J.E.C. Scully

California Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge