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Dive into the research topics where Paul O. Hayne is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul O. Hayne.


Science | 2010

Diviner lunar radiometer observations of cold traps in the moon's south polar region

David A. Paige; Matthew A. Siegler; Jo Ann Zhang; Paul O. Hayne; Emily J. Foote; Kristen A. Bennett; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Benjamin Todd Greenhagen; John T. Schofield; Daniel J. McCleese; Marc C. Foote; Eric DeJong; Bruce G. Bills; Wayne Hartford; Bruce C. Murray; Carlton C. Allen; Kelly Jean Snook; Laurence A. Soderblom; Simon B. Calcutt; F. W. Taylor; Neil E. Bowles; Joshua L. Bandfield; Richard C. Elphic; Rebecca Rose Ghent; Timothy D. Glotch; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Paul G. Lucey

Watering the Moon About a year ago, a spent upper stage of an Atlas rocket was deliberately crashed into a crater at the south pole of the Moon, ejecting a plume of debris, dust, and vapor. The goal of this event, the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) experiment, was to search for water and other volatiles in the soil of one of the coldest places on the Moon: the permanently shadowed region within the Cabeus crater. Using ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared spectroscopy data from accompanying craft, Colaprete et al. (p. 463; see the news story by Kerr; see the cover) found evidence for the presence of water and other volatiles within the ejecta cloud. Schultz et al. (p. 468) monitored the different stages of the impact and the resulting plume. Gladstone et al. (p. 472), using an ultraviolet spectrograph onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), detected H2, CO, Ca, Hg, and Mg in the impact plume, and Hayne et al. (p. 477) measured the thermal signature of the impact and discovered that it had heated a 30 to 200 square-meter region from ∼40 kelvin to at least 950 kelvin. Paige et al. (p. 479) mapped cryogenic zones predictive of volatile entrapment, and Mitrofanov et al. (p. 483) used LRO instruments to confirm that surface temperatures in the south polar region persist even in sunlight. In all, about 155 kilograms of water vapor was emitted during the impact; meanwhile, the LRO continues to orbit the Moon, sending back a stream of data to help us understand the evolution of its complex surface structures. A controlled spacecraft impact into a crater in the lunar south pole plunged through the lunar soil, revealing water and other volatiles. Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment surface-temperature maps reveal the existence of widespread surface and near-surface cryogenic regions that extend beyond the boundaries of persistent shadow. The Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) struck one of the coldest of these regions, where subsurface temperatures are estimated to be 38 kelvin. Large areas of the lunar polar regions are currently cold enough to cold-trap water ice as well as a range of both more volatile and less volatile species. The diverse mixture of water and high-volatility compounds detected in the LCROSS ejecta plume is strong evidence for the impact delivery and cold-trapping of volatiles derived from primitive outer solar system bodies.


Science | 2010

Global Silicate Mineralogy of the Moon from the Diviner Lunar Radiometer

Benjamin Todd Greenhagen; Paul G. Lucey; Michael Bruce Wyatt; Timothy D. Glotch; Carlton C. Allen; Jessica A. Arnold; Joshua L. Bandfield; Neil E. Bowles; Kerri L. Donaldson Hanna; Paul O. Hayne; Eugenie Song; I. R. Thomas; David A. Paige

Lunar Reconnaissance The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter reached lunar orbit on 23 June 2009. Global data acquired since then now tell us about the impact history of the Moon and the igneous processes that shaped it. Using the Lunar Orbiter Laser Altimeter, Head et al. (p. 1504; see the cover) provide a new catalog of large lunar craters. In the lunar highlands, large-impact craters have obliterated preexisting craters of similar size, implying that crater counts in this region cannot be used effectively to determine the age of the underlying terrain. Crater counts based on the global data set indicate that the nature of the Moons impactor population has changed over time. Greenhagen et al. (p. 1507) and Glotch et al. (p. 1510) analyzed data from the Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment, which measures emitted thermal radiation and reflected solar radiation at infrared wavelengths. The silicate mineralogy revealed suggests the existence of more complex igneous processes on the Moon than previously assumed. Remote thermal emission spectroscopy reveals the existence of complex igneous processes on the Moon. We obtained direct global measurements of the lunar surface using multispectral thermal emission mapping with the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment. Most lunar terrains have spectral signatures that are consistent with known lunar anorthosite and basalt compositions. However, the data have also revealed the presence of highly evolved, silica-rich lunar soils in kilometer-scale and larger exposures, expanded the compositional range of the anorthosites that dominate the lunar crust, and shown that pristine lunar mantle is not exposed at the lunar surface at the kilometer scale. Together, these observations provide compelling evidence that the Moon is a complex body that has experienced a diverse set of igneous processes.


Science | 2010

Diviner Lunar Radiometer Observations of the LCROSS Impact

Paul O. Hayne; Benjamin Todd Greenhagen; Marc C. Foote; Matthew A. Siegler; Ashwin R. Vasavada; David A. Paige

Watering the Moon About a year ago, a spent upper stage of an Atlas rocket was deliberately crashed into a crater at the south pole of the Moon, ejecting a plume of debris, dust, and vapor. The goal of this event, the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) experiment, was to search for water and other volatiles in the soil of one of the coldest places on the Moon: the permanently shadowed region within the Cabeus crater. Using ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared spectroscopy data from accompanying craft, Colaprete et al. (p. 463; see the news story by Kerr; see the cover) found evidence for the presence of water and other volatiles within the ejecta cloud. Schultz et al. (p. 468) monitored the different stages of the impact and the resulting plume. Gladstone et al. (p. 472), using an ultraviolet spectrograph onboard the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), detected H2, CO, Ca, Hg, and Mg in the impact plume, and Hayne et al. (p. 477) measured the thermal signature of the impact and discovered that it had heated a 30 to 200 square-meter region from ∼40 kelvin to at least 950 kelvin. Paige et al. (p. 479) mapped cryogenic zones predictive of volatile entrapment, and Mitrofanov et al. (p. 483) used LRO instruments to confirm that surface temperatures in the south polar region persist even in sunlight. In all, about 155 kilograms of water vapor was emitted during the impact; meanwhile, the LRO continues to orbit the Moon, sending back a stream of data to help us understand the evolution of its complex surface structures. A controlled spacecraft impact into a crater in the lunar south pole plunged through the lunar soil, revealing water and other volatiles. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) Diviner instrument detected a thermal emission signature 90 seconds after the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) Centaur impact and on two subsequent orbits. The impact heated a region of 30 to 200 square meters to at least 950 kelvin, providing a sustained heat source for the sublimation of up to ~300 kilograms of water ice during the 4 minutes of LCROSS post-impact observations. Diviner visible observations constrain the mass of the sunlit ejecta column to be ~10−6 to 10−5 kilograms per square meter, which is consistent with LCROSS estimates used to derive the relative abundance of the ice within the regolith.


Planetary Science | 2013

Precipitation-induced surface brightenings seen on Titan by Cassini VIMS and ISS

Jason W. Barnes; Bonnie J. Buratti; Elizabeth P. Turtle; J. Bow; Paul A. Dalba; Jason Perry; Robert H. Brown; Sebastien Rodriguez; Stephane Le Mouelic; Kevin H. Baines; Christophe Sotin; Ralph D. Lorenz; Michael Malaska; Thomas B. McCord; Roger N. Clark; R. Jaumann; Paul O. Hayne; Philip D. Nicholson; Jason M. Soderblom; Laurence A. Soderblom

AbstractObservations from Cassini VIMS and ISS show localized but extensive surface brightenings in the wake of the 2010 September cloudburst. Four separate areas, all at similar latitude, show similar changes: Yalaing Terra, Hetpet Regio, Concordia Regio, and Adiri. Our analysis shows a general pattern to the time-sequence of surface changes: after the cloudburst the areas darken for months, then brighten for a year before reverting to their original spectrum. From the rapid reversion timescale we infer that the process driving the brightening owes to a fine-grained solidified surface layer. The specific chemical composition of such solid layer remains unknown. Evaporative cooling of wetted terrain may play a role in the generation of the layer, or it may result from a physical grain-sorting process.


Nature Communications | 2015

Formation of lunar swirls by magnetic field standoff of the solar wind

Timothy D. Glotch; Joshua L. Bandfield; Paul G. Lucey; Paul O. Hayne; Benjamin Todd Greenhagen; Jessica A. Arnold; Rebecca Rose Ghent; David A. Paige

Lunar swirls are high-albedo markings on the Moon that occur in both mare and highland terrains; their origin remains a point of contention. Here, we use data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Diviner Lunar Radiometer to support the hypothesis that the swirls are formed as a result of deflection of the solar wind by local magnetic fields. Thermal infrared data from this instrument display an anomaly in the position of the silicate Christiansen Feature consistent with reduced space weathering. These data also show that swirl regions are not thermophysically anomalous, which strongly constrains their formation mechanism. The results of this study indicate that either solar wind sputtering and implantation are more important than micrometeoroid bombardment in the space-weathering process, or that micrometeoroid bombardment is a necessary but not sufficient process in space weathering, which occurs on airless bodies throughout the solar system.


Geology | 2014

Constraints on the recent rate of lunar ejecta breakdown and implications for crater ages

Rebecca Rose Ghent; Paul O. Hayne; Joshua L. Bandfield; Bruce A. Campbell; Carlton C. Allen; L. M. Carter; David A. Paige

We present a new empirical constraint on the rate of breakdown of large ejecta blocks on the Moon based on observations from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) Diviner thermal radiometer. We find that the rockiness of fresh crater ejecta can be quantified using the Diviner-derived rock abundance data set, and we present a strong inverse correlation between the 95 th percentile value of the ejecta rock abundance (RA 95/5 ) and crater age. For nine craters with published model ages derived from crater counts on their continuous ejecta, RA 95/5 decreases with crater age, as (age [m.y.]) −0.46 . This result implies shorter rock survival times than predicted based on downward extrapolation of 100 m crater size-frequency distributions, and represents a new empirical constraint on the rate of comminution of large rocks not previously analyzed experimentally or through direct observation. In addition, our result provides a new method for dating young lunar craters.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Extreme detached dust layers near Martian volcanoes: Evidence for dust transport by mesoscale circulations forced by high topography

Nicholas G. Heavens; B. A. Cantor; Paul O. Hayne; David Michael Kass; Armin Kleinböhl; Daniel J. McCleese; Sylvain Piqueux; John T. Schofield; James H. Shirley

Modeling suggests that thermal circulations over Marss highest volcanoes transport water vapor and dust from the surface into the middle atmosphere, forming detached layers in these constituents. Intense vertical mixing also takes place in regional and global dust storms, which can generate detached layers that are extreme in both altitude and magnitude. Here we employ observations by the Mars Climate Sounder (MCS) on board Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, taking advantage of improved vertical coverage in MCSs aerosol retrievals, to discover a new class of extreme detached dust layers (EDDLs). Observed during minimal dust storm activity and furthermore distinguished by their potentially large and measurable horizontal extent (>1000 km), these EDDLs cluster near Olympus Mons and the Tharsis Montes, from which they likely originate. The existence of these EDDLs suggests that vertical mixing by topographic circulations can be much stronger than previously modeled and more frequent than previously observed.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Conditions for Sublimating Water Ice to Supply Ceres' Exosphere

Margaret E. Landis; Shane Byrne; Norbert Schorghofer; Britney E. Schmidt; Paul O. Hayne; Julie C. Castillo-Rogez; Mark V. Sykes; J.-P. Combe; A. I. Ermakov; T.H. Prettyman; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell

Dawn at Ceres Guest Investigator Program award [NNX15AI29G]; NSF Graduate Research Fellowship award [DGE-1143653]


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Discovery of a widespread low‐latitude diurnal CO2 frost cycle on Mars

Sylvain Piqueux; Armin Kleinböhl; Paul O. Hayne; Nicholas G. Heavens; David Michael Kass; Daniel J. McCleese; John T. Schofield; James H. Shirley

While the detection of CO2 ice has only been reported outside the Martian polar regions at very high elevation (i.e., Elysium, Olympus Mons, and the Tharsis Montes), nighttime surface observations by the Mars Climate Sounder on board the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter document the widespread occurrence of atmospherically corrected ground temperatures consistent with the presence of extensive carbon dioxide frost deposits in the dusty low thermal inertia units at middle/low latitudes. Thermal infrared emissivities, interpreted in conjunction with mass balance modeling, suggest micrometer size CO2 ice crystals forming optically thin layers never exceeding a few hundreds of microns in thickness (i.e., 10−2 kg m−2) locally, which is insufficient to generate a measurable diurnal pressure cycle (<<0.1% of the Martian atmosphere). Atmospheric temperatures at middle/low latitudes are not consistent with precipitation of CO2 ice, suggesting that condensation occurs on the surface. The recurring growth and sublimation of CO2 ice on Martian dusty terrains may be an important process preventing soil induration and promoting dynamic phenomena (soil avalanching and fluidization and regolith gardening), maintaining a reservoir of micrometer size dust particles that are mobile and available for lifting. The discovery of this diurnal CO2 cycle represents an important step forward in our understanding of the way the Martian atmosphere interacts with the surface.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Global Regolith Thermophysical Properties of the Moon From the Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment

Paul O. Hayne; Joshua L. Bandfield; Matthew A. Siegler; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Rebecca Rose Ghent; Jean-Pierre Williams; Benjamin Todd Greenhagen; Oded Aharonson; Catherine M. Elder; Paul G. Lucey; David A. Paige

We used infrared data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) Diviner Lunar Radiometer Experiment to globally map thermophysical properties of the Moons regolith fines layer. Thermal conductivity varies from 7.4

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David A. Paige

University of California

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Benjamin Todd Greenhagen

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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Matthew A. Siegler

Southern Methodist University

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Paul G. Lucey

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Ashwin R. Vasavada

California Institute of Technology

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Daniel J. McCleese

California Institute of Technology

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John T. Schofield

California Institute of Technology

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