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Featured researches published by P. Cerroni.


Nature | 2004

Perennial water ice identified in the south polar cap of Mars.

Jean-Pierre Bibring; Y. Langevin; F. Poulet; A. Gendrin; B. Gondet; Michel Berthé; Alain Soufflot; P. Drossart; M. Combes; G. Belluci; V.I. Moroz; N. Mangold; Bernard Schmitt; Stephane Erard; Olivier Forni; N. Manaud; G. Poulleau; Th. Encrenaz; Thierry Fouchet; Riccardo Melchiorri; F. Altieri; V. Formisano; G. Bonello; S. Fonti; F. Capaccioni; P. Cerroni; Angioletta Coradini; V. Kottsov; Nikolay Ignatiev; Dmitri Titov

The inventory of water and carbon dioxide reservoirs on Mars are important clues for understanding the geological, climatic and potentially exobiological evolution of the planet. From the early mapping observation of the permanent ice caps on the martian poles, the northern cap was believed to be mainly composed of water ice, whereas the southern cap was thought to be constituted of carbon dioxide ice. However, recent missions (NASA missions Mars Global Surveyor and Odyssey) have revealed surface structures, altimetry profiles, underlying buried hydrogen, and temperatures of the south polar regions that are thermodynamically consistent with a mixture of surface water ice and carbon dioxide. Here we present the first direct identification and mapping of both carbon dioxide and water ice in the martian high southern latitudes, at a resolution of 2 km, during the local summer, when the extent of the polar ice is at its minimum. We observe that this south polar cap contains perennial water ice in extended areas: as a small admixture to carbon dioxide in the bright regions; associated with dust, without carbon dioxide, at the edges of this bright cap; and, unexpectedly, in large areas tens of kilometres away from the bright cap.


Science | 2015

The organic-rich surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko as seen by VIRTIS/Rosetta

F. Capaccioni; Angioletta Coradini; G. Filacchione; S. Erard; Gabriele Arnold; P. Drossart; M.C. De Sanctis; D. Bockelee-Morvan; M. T. Capria; F. Tosi; Cedric Leyrat; B. Schmitt; Eric Quirico; P. Cerroni; V. Mennella; A. Raponi; M. Ciarniello; T. B. McCord; L. V. Moroz; E. Palomba; E. Ammannito; M. A. Barucci; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; Maria I. Blecka; Robert W. Carlson; U. Carsenty; L. Colangeli

The VIRTIS (Visible, Infrared and Thermal Imaging Spectrometer) instrument on board the Rosetta spacecraft has provided evidence of carbon-bearing compounds on the nucleus of the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The very low reflectance of the nucleus (normal albedo of 0.060 ± 0.003 at 0.55 micrometers), the spectral slopes in visible and infrared ranges (5 to 25 and 1.5 to 5% kÅ−1), and the broad absorption feature in the 2.9-to-3.6–micrometer range present across the entire illuminated surface are compatible with opaque minerals associated with nonvolatile organic macromolecular materials: a complex mixture of various types of carbon-hydrogen and/or oxygen-hydrogen chemical groups, with little contribution of nitrogen-hydrogen groups. In active areas, the changes in spectral slope and absorption feature width may suggest small amounts of water-ice. However, no ice-rich patches are observed, indicating a generally dehydrated nature for the surface currently illuminated by the Sun.


Nature | 2005

Compositional maps of Saturn's moon Phoebe from imaging spectroscopy

Roger N. Clark; Robert H. Brown; R. Jaumann; Dale P. Cruikshank; Robert M. Nelson; Bonnie J. Buratti; Thomas B. McCord; Jonathan I. Lunine; Kevin H. Baines; G. Bellucci; Jean-Pierre Bibring; F. Capaccioni; P. Cerroni; Angioletta Coradini; V. Formisano; Yves Langevin; Dennis L. Matson; V. Mennella; P. D. Nicholson; Bruno Sicardy; Christophe Sotin; Todd M. Hoefen; John Curchin; Gary B. Hansen; Karl Hibbits; Klaus-Dieter Matz

The origin of Phoebe, which is the outermost large satellite of Saturn, is of particular interest because its inclined, retrograde orbit suggests that it was gravitationally captured by Saturn, having accreted outside the region of the solar nebula in which Saturn formed. By contrast, Saturns regular satellites (with prograde, low-inclination, circular orbits) probably accreted within the sub-nebula in which Saturn itself formed. Here we report imaging spectroscopy of Phoebe resulting from the Cassini–Huygens spacecraft encounter on 11 June 2004. We mapped ferrous-iron-bearing minerals, bound water, trapped CO2, probable phyllosilicates, organics, nitriles and cyanide compounds. Detection of these compounds on Phoebe makes it one of the most compositionally diverse objects yet observed in our Solar System. It is likely that Phoebes surface contains primitive materials from the outer Solar System, indicating a surface of cometary origin.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Cassini Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer Observations of Iapetus: Detection of CO2

Bonnie J. Buratti; Dale P. Cruikshank; Robert H. Brown; Roger N. Clark; James Monie Bauer; R. Jaumann; T. B. McCord; D. P. Simonelli; Charles Arthur Hibbitts; Gary B. Hansen; Tobias Owen; Kevin H. Baines; G. Bellucci; Jean-Pierre Bibring; F. Capaccioni; P. Cerroni; Angioletta Coradini; Pierre Drossart; V. Formisano; Yves Langevin; Dennis L. Matson; V. Mennella; Robert M. Nelson; P. D. Nicholson; Bruno Sicardy; Christophe Sotin; Ted L. Roush; Kenneth Soderlund; A. Muradyan

The Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) instrument aboard the Cassini spacecraft obtained its first spectral map of the satellite Iapetus in which new absorption bands are seen in the spectra of both the low-albedo hemisphere and the H2O ice-rich hemisphere. Carbon dioxide is identified in the low-albedo material, probably as a photochemically produced molecule that is trapped in H2O ice or in some mineral or complex organic solid. Other absorption bands are unidentified. The spectrum of the low-albedo hemisphere is satisfactorily modeled with a combination of organic tholin, poly-HCN, and small amounts of H2O ice and Fe2O3. The high-albedo hemisphere is modeled with H2O ice slightly darkened with tholin. The detection of CO2 in the low-albedo material on the leading hemisphere supports the contention that it is carbon-bearing material from an external source that has been swept up by the satellites orbital motion.


Science | 2011

The Surface Composition and Temperature of Asteroid 21 Lutetia As Observed by Rosetta/VIRTIS

Angioletta Coradini; F. Capaccioni; S. Erard; Gabriele Arnold; M.C. De Sanctis; G. Filacchione; F. Tosi; M. A. Barucci; M. T. Capria; E. Ammannito; D. Grassi; Giuseppe Piccioni; S. Giuppi; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; Maria I. Blecka; D. Bockelee-Morvan; F. Carraro; R. Carlson; U. Carsenty; P. Cerroni; L. Colangeli; M. Combes; Michael R. Combi; J. Crovisier; P. Drossart; E. T. Encrenaz; C. Federico

A spacecraft flyby of an asteroid reveals a high-density body that is more like a planetesimal than a rubble pile. The Visible, InfraRed, and Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) on Rosetta obtained hyperspectral images, spectral reflectance maps, and temperature maps of the asteroid 21 Lutetia. No absorption features, of either silicates or hydrated minerals, have been detected across the observed area in the spectral range from 0.4 to 3.5 micrometers. The surface temperature reaches a maximum value of 245 kelvin and correlates well with topographic features. The thermal inertia is in the range from 20 to 30 joules meter−2 kelvin−1 second−0.5, comparable to a lunarlike powdery regolith. Spectral signatures of surface alteration, resulting from space weathering, seem to be missing. Lutetia is likely a remnant of the primordial planetesimal population, unaltered by differentiation processes and composed of chondritic materials of enstatitic or carbonaceous origin, dominated by iron-poor minerals that have not suffered aqueous alteration.


Nature | 2015

The diurnal cycle of water ice on comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko

M.C. De Sanctis; F. Capaccioni; M. Ciarniello; G. Filacchione; M. Formisano; S. Mottola; A. Raponi; F. Tosi; D. Bockelee-Morvan; S. Erard; Cedric Leyrat; B. Schmitt; E. Ammannito; Gabriele Arnold; M. A. Barucci; Michael R. Combi; M. T. Capria; P. Cerroni; Wing-Huen Ip; E. Kuehrt; T. B. McCord; E. Palomba; Pierre Beck; Eric Quirico

Observations of cometary nuclei have revealed a very limited amount of surface water ice, which is insufficient to explain the observed water outgassing. This was clearly demonstrated on comet 9P/Tempel 1, where the dust jets (driven by volatiles) were only partially correlated with the exposed ice regions. The observations of 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko have revealed that activity has a diurnal variation in intensity arising from changing insolation conditions. It was previously concluded that water vapour was generated in ice-rich subsurface layers with a transport mechanism linked to solar illumination, but that has not hitherto been observed. Periodic condensations of water vapour very close to, or on, the surface were suggested to explain short-lived outbursts seen near sunrise on comet 9P/Tempel 1. Here we report observations of water ice on the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, appearing and disappearing in a cyclic pattern that follows local illumination conditions, providing a source of localized activity. This water cycle appears to be an important process in the evolution of the comet, leading to cyclical modification of the relative abundance of water ice on its surface.


Nature | 2016

Exposed water ice on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko

G. Filacchione; M.C. De Sanctis; F. Capaccioni; A. Raponi; F. Tosi; M. Ciarniello; P. Cerroni; G. Piccioni; M. T. Capria; E. Palomba; G. Bellucci; Stephane Erard; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; Cedric Leyrat; Gabriele Arnold; M. A. Barucci; M. Fulchignoni; B. Schmitt; Eric Quirico; R. Jaumann; K. Stephan; A. Longobardo; V. Mennella; A. Migliorini; E. Ammannito; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; M. I. Blecka; R. Carlson

Although water vapour is the main species observed in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko and water is the major constituent of cometary nuclei, limited evidence for exposed water-ice regions on the surface of the nucleus has been found so far. The absence of large regions of exposed water ice seems a common finding on the surfaces of many of the comets observed so far. The nucleus of 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko appears to be fairly uniformly coated with dark, dehydrated, refractory and organic-rich material. Here we report the identification at infrared wavelengths of water ice on two debris falls in the Imhotep region of the nucleus. The ice has been exposed on the walls of elevated structures and at the base of the walls. A quantitative derivation of the abundance of ice in these regions indicates the presence of millimetre-sized pure water-ice grains, considerably larger than in all previous observations. Although micrometre-sized water-ice grains are the usual result of vapour recondensation in ice-free layers, the occurrence of millimetre-sized grains of pure ice as observed in the Imhotep debris falls is best explained by grain growth by vapour diffusion in ice-rich layers, or by sintering. As a consequence of these processes, the nucleus can develop an extended and complex coating in which the outer dehydrated crust is superimposed on layers enriched in water ice. The stratigraphy observed on 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko is therefore the result of evolutionary processes affecting the uppermost metres of the nucleus and does not necessarily require a global layering to have occurred at the time of the comet’s formation.


Icarus | 2012

Saturn's icy satellites and rings investigated by Cassini-VIMS: III - Radial compositional variability

G. Filacchione; F. Capaccioni; M. Ciarniello; Roger N. Clark; Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; P. D. Nicholson; Dale P. Cruikshank; Matthew Mckay Hedman; Bonnie J. Buratti; Jonathan I. Lunine; L. A. Soderblom; F. Tosi; P. Cerroni; Robert H. Brown; T. B. McCord; R. Jaumann; K. Stephan; Kevin H. Baines; E. Flamini

In the last few years Cassini–VIMS, the Visible and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer, returned to us a comprehensive view of the Saturn’s icy satellites and rings. After having analyzed the satellites’ spectral properties (Filacchione, G., Capaccioni, F., McCord, T.B., Coradini, A., Cerroni, P., Bellucci, G., Tosi, F., D’Aversa, E., Formisano, V., Brown, R.H., Baines, K.H., Bibring, J.P., Buratti, B.J., Clark, R.N., Combes, M., Cruikshank, D.P., Drossart, P., Jaumann, R., Langevin, Y., Matson, D.L., Mennella, V., Nelson, R.M., Nicholson, P.D., Sicardy, B., Sotin, C., Hansen, G., Hibbitts, K., Showalter, M., Newman, S. [2007]. Icarus 186, 259–290, paper I) and their distribution across the satellites’ hemispheres (Filacchione, G., Capaccioni, F., Clark, R.N., Cuzzi, J.N., Cruikshank, D.P., Coradini, A., Cerroni, P., Nicholson, P.D., McCord, T.B., Brown, R.H., Buratti, B.J., Tosi, F., Nelson, R.M., Jaumann, R., Stephan, K. [2010]. Icarus 206, 507–523, paper II), we proceed in this paper to investigate the radial variability of icy satellites (principal and minor) and main rings average spectral properties. This analysis is done by using 2264 disk-integrated observations of the satellites and a 12 × 700 pixels-wide rings radial mosaic acquired with a spatial resolution of about 125 km/pixel. Using different VIS and IR spectral indicators, e.g. spectral slopes and band depths, we perform a comparative analysis of these data aimed to measure the distribution of water ice and red contaminant materials across Saturn’s system. The average surface regolith grain sizes are estimated with different indicators through comparison with laboratory and synthetic spectra. These measurements highlight very striking differences in the population here analyzed, which vary from the almost uncontaminated and water ice-rich surfaces of Enceladus and Calypso to the metal/organic-rich and red surfaces of Iapetus’ leading hemisphere and Phoebe. Rings spectra appear more red than the icy satellites in the visible range but show more intense 1.5–2.0 μm band depths. Although their orbits are close to the F-ring, Prometheus and Pandora are different in surface composition: Prometheus in fact appears very water ice-rich but at the same time very red at VIS wavelengths. These properties make it very similar to A–B ring particles while Pandora is bluer. Moving outwards, we see the effects of E ring particles, generated by Enceladus plumes, which contaminate satellites surfaces from Mimas out to Rhea. We found some differences between Tethys lagrangian moons, Calypso being much more water ice-rich and bluer than Telesto. Among outer satellites (Hyperion, Iapetus and Phoebe) we observe a linear trend in both water ice decrease and in reddening, Hyperion being the reddest object of the population. The correlations among spectral slopes, band depths, visual albedo and phase permit us to cluster the saturnian population in different spectral classes which are detected not only among the principal satellites and rings but among co-orbital minor moons as well. These bodies are effectively the “connection” elements, both in term of composition and evolution, between the principal satellites and main rings. Finally, we have applied Hapke’s theory to retrieve the best spectral fits to Saturn’s inner regular satellites (from Mimas to Dione) using the same methodology applied previously for Rhea data discussed in Ciarniello et al. (Ciarniello, M., Capaccioni, F., Filacchione, G., Clark, R.N., Cruikshank, D.P., Cerroni, P., Coradini, A., Brown, R.H., Buratti, B.J., Tosi, F., Stephan, K. [2011]. Icarus 214, 541–555).


Nature | 2007

Surface composition of Hyperion

Dale P. Cruikshank; J. B. Dalton; C.M. Dalle Ore; James Monie Bauer; K. Stephan; G. Filacchione; Amanda R. Hendrix; Carl J. Hansen; Angioletta Coradini; P. Cerroni; F. Tosi; F. Capaccioni; R. Jaumann; Bonnie J. Buratti; R.N. Clark; Robert H. Brown; Robert M. Nelson; T. B. McCord; Kevin H. Baines; P. D. Nicholson; Christophe Sotin; Allan W. Meyer; G. Bellucci; M. Combes; J.-P. Bibring; Yves Langevin; B. Sicardy; Dennis L. Matson; Vittorio Formisano; P. Drossart

Hyperion, Saturn’s eighth largest icy satellite, is a body of irregular shape in a state of chaotic rotation. The surface is segregated into two distinct units. A spatially dominant high-albedo unit having the strong signature of H2O ice contrasts with a unit that is about a factor of four lower in albedo and is found mostly in the bottoms of cup-like craters. Here we report observations of Hyperion’s surface in the ultraviolet and near-infrared spectral regions with two optical remote sensing instruments on the Cassini spacecraft at closest approach during a fly-by on 25–26 September 2005. The close fly-by afforded us the opportunity to obtain separate reflectance spectra of the high- and low-albedo surface components. The low-albedo material has spectral similarities and compositional signatures that link it with the surface of Phoebe and a hemisphere-wide superficial coating on Iapetus.


Icarus | 1990

Phase curves of meteorites and terrestrial rocks: Laboratory measurements and applications to asteroids

F. Capaccioni; P. Cerroni; M. A. Barucci; M. Fulchignoni

Abstract The measurement of the radiation reflected by a particulate surface as a function of the phase angle can be a powerful method for deriving information about the physical and chemical properties of the materials composing the surface layers of atmosphereless bodies of the Solar System. Several theoretical descriptions of the light scattering by a particulate surface have been developed to explain the observations of the phase functions for a number of Solar System bodies (asteroids, satellites of Jupiter, Moon, and Mercury). However, laboratory measurements on naturally occuring materials, both terrestrial and extraterrestrial, are needed to improve the understanding of the physics of the processes involved. The authors report the results of laboratory measurements carried out at the Teramo Observatory to study the reflectance of powdered meteorites and terrestrial rocks at various phase angles. We analyzed the reflectance of 17 meteorites: 14 chondrites (3 C-type, 5 L-type, 4 H-type, 2 LL-type), and 3 achondrites. In addition, a study of the effects on the phase curve of varying the size fraction and the compaction degree has been carried out on terrestrial rocks (peridotite, diabase, quartz-rich sand).

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Dale P. Cruikshank

California Institute of Technology

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Kevin H. Baines

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Y. Langevin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christophe Sotin

California Institute of Technology

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