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Dive into the research topics where Rosemary M. Killen is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosemary M. Killen.


CubeSats and NanoSats for Remote Sensing II | 2018

Overview of Phobos/Deimos Regolith Ion Sample Mission (PRISM) concept

Andrew Scott Rivkin; Scott L. Murchie; Dana M. Hurley; Jasper S. Halekas; Richard R. Vondrak; Timothy J. Stubbs; Rosemary M. Killen; Menelaos Sarantos; Sarah Jones; J. R. Espley; Pamela Elizabeth Clark; Michael R. Collier; William M. Farrell; Dave Folta; Kyle Hughes; John W. Keller; Benjamin Malphrus; Micah Schaible; Gina A. DiBraccio

Far more definitive information on composition is required to resolve the question of origin for the Martian moons Phobos and Deimos. Current infrared spectra of the objects are inconclusive due to the lack of strong diagnostic features. Definitive compositional measurements of Phobos could be obtained using in-situ X-ray, gamma-ray, or neutron spectroscopy or collecting and returning samples to Earth for analysis. We have proposed, in lieu of those methods, to derive Phobos and Deimos compositional data from secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) measurements by calibrating the instrument to elemental abundance measurements made for known samples in the laboratory. We describe the Phobos/Deimos Regolith Ion Sample Mission (PRISM) concept here. PRISM utilizes a high-resolution TOF plasma composition analyzer to make SIMS measurements by observing the sputtered species from various locations of the moons surfaces. In general, the SIMS technique and ion mass spectrometers complement and expand quadrupole mass spectrometer measurements by collecting ions that have been energized to higher energies, 50-100 eV, and making measurements at very low densities and pressures. Furthermore, because the TOF technique accepts all masses all the time, it obtains continuous measurements and does not require stepping through masses. The instrument would draw less than 10 W and weigh less than 5 kg. The spacecraft, nominally a radiation-hardened 12U CubeSat, would use a low-thrust Solar Electric Propulsion system to send it on a two-year journey to Mars, where it would co-orbit with Deimos and then Phobos at distances as low as 27 km.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2001

X‐ray fluorescence measurements of the surface elemental composition of asteroid 433 Eros

Larry R. Nittler; Richard D. Starr; Lucy F. G. Lim; Timothy J. McCoy; T. H. Burbine; R. C. Reedy; Jacob I. Trombka; Paul Gorenstein; Steven W. Squyres; William V. Boynton; Timothy P. McClanahan; Jesse S. Bhangoo; Pamela Elizabeth Clark; Mary Ellen Murphy; Rosemary M. Killen


Archive | 2011

Early MESSENGER Results for Less Abundant or Weakly Emitting Species in Mercury's Exosphere

Ronald Joe Vervack; William E. McClintock; Rosemary M. Killen; Ann L. Sprague; Matthew H. Burger; A. W. Merkel; Menelaos Sarantos


Archive | 2011

Calcium in Mercury's Exosphere: Modeling MESSENGER Data

Matthew H. Burger; Rosemary M. Killen; William E. McClintock; A. W. Merkel; Ronald Joe Vervack; Menelaos Sarantos; Ann L. Sprague


Archive | 2001

Examination of the Apparent Sulfur and Other Element Depletions of 433 Eros Relative to Ordinary Chondrites

Pamela Elizabeth Clark; Rosemary M. Killen; Maureen Murphy; Timothy J. McCoy


Archive | 2012

Comparing the Atmospheres of Mercury and the Earth's Moon

Thomas H. Morgan; Rosemary M. Killen; Dana M. Hurley


Archive | 2012

Observations and Models of the Lunar Sodium Exosphere 1988 - 1999

Rosemary M. Killen; Menelaos Sarantos; Dana M. Hurley; Andrew E. Potter; Thomas H. Morgan; William M. Farrell; Shantanu P. Naidu


Archive | 2012

Effects of an ICME on the Lunar Exosphere

Dana M. Hurley; Rosemary M. Killen; William M. Farrell


Archive | 2012

Mercury's Sodium Exosphere: Observations during the MESSENGER Orbital Phase

Rosemary M. Killen; Timothy A. Cassidy; Ronald Joe Vervack; Matthew H. Burger; A. W. Merkel; Menelaos Sarantos; Ann L. Sprague; William E. McClintock; Mehdi Benna; Sean C. Solomon


Archive | 2012

Mercury's Na Exosphere from MESSENGER Data

Rosemary M. Killen; Matthew H. Burger; Timothy A. Cassidy; Menelaos Sarantos; Ronald Joe Vervack; W. El McClintock; A. W. Merkel; Ann L. Sprague; Sean C. Solomon

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William E. McClintock

University of Colorado Boulder

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Menelaos Sarantos

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Ronald Joe Vervack

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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Matthew H. Burger

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Dana M. Hurley

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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A. W. Merkel

University of Colorado Boulder

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Mehdi Benna

Goddard Space Flight Center

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William M. Farrell

California Institute of Technology

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