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Dive into the research topics where Stephen C. Tegler is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen C. Tegler.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1995

Evidence for Chemical Processing of Precometary Icy Grains In Circumstellar Environments of Pre-Main-Sequence Stars

Stephen C. Tegler; David A. Weintraub; Terrence W. Rettig; Yvonne J. Pendleton; Douglas C. B. Whittet; Craig Kulesa

We report the detection of a broad absorption feature near 2166/cm in the spectrum of the Taurus cloud cource Elias 18. This pre-main-sequence source is the second in Taurus, the third in our survey, and the fifth known in the sky to show the broad 2166/cm absorption feature. Of equal importance, this feature is not seen toward several other embedded sources in our survey, nor is it seen toward the source Elias 16, located behind the Taurus cloud. Laboratory experiments with interstellar ice analogs show that such a feature is associated with a complex C triple bonded to N containing compound (called X(C triple bonded to N)) that results from high-energy processing (ultraviolet irradiation or ion bombardment) of simple ice components into more complex, organic components. We find a nonlinear anticorrelation between the abundance of X(C triple bonded to N) and frozen CO components in nonpolar lattices. We find no correlation between the abundance of X(C triple bonded to N) and frozen CO in polar lattices. Because the abundances of frozen CO and H2O are strongly correlated with each other and with visual extinction toward sources embedded in and located behind the Taurus molecular cloud, these ice components usually are associated with intracloud material. Our results indicate that X(C triple bonded to N) molecules result from chemical processing of dust grains dominated by nonpolar icy mantles in the local environments of pre-main-sequence stars. Such processing of icy grains in the early solar system may be an important source of organic compounds observed in minor solar system bodies. The delivery of these organic compounds to the surface of the primitive Earth through comet impacts may have provided the raw materials for prebiotic chemistry.


Archive | 2008

Colors of Centaurs

Stephen C. Tegler; James Monie Bauer; W. J. Romanishin; Nuno Peixinho


Archive | 2000

Size, Shape, Rotation, and Color of the Outer Solar System Object 1999 TD10

Guy J. Consolmagno; Stephen C. Tegler; Terrence W. Rettig; W. J. Romanishin


Archive | 1994

Hubble Space Telescope Observations of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 Subnuclei: Solid Bodies or Swarms?

Terrence W. Rettig; Joseph M. Hahn; Stephen C. Tegler; Michael J. Mumma; Michael A. DiSanti


Archive | 2008

Colors of Inner Disk KBOs

W. J. Romanishin; Stephen C. Tegler; Guy J. Consolmagno


Archive | 1994

Are the Fragments of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 Swarms of Meter-Sized Planetesimals?

Terrence W. Rettig; Michael J. Mumma; Stephen C. Tegler; Joseph M. Hahn


Archive | 2006

Comet 174P/Echeclus

Stephen C. Tegler; Guy J. Consolmagno; W. J. Romanishin


Archive | 2006

Motion of the Activity Source Associated with Active Centaur 174P/Echeclus (60558)

Paul R. Weissman; Steven R. Chesley; Young-Jun Choi; James Monie Bauer; Stephen C. Tegler; W. J. Romanishin; Guy J. Consolmagno; John Arthur Stansberry


Archive | 2010

Colors of Outer Solar System Objects Measured with VATT

W. J. Romanishin; Stephen C. Tegler; Guy J. Consolmagno


Archive | 2010

Methane and Nitrogen Abundances on Eris and Pluto

Stephen C. Tegler; David Mark Cornelison; William M. Grundy; W. J. Romanishin; M. R. Abernathy; M. Bovyn; Jonathan Matthew Burt; D. Evans; C. K. Maleszewski; Zachary John Thompson; Faith Vilas

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Terrence W. Rettig

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Michael J. Mumma

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Humberto Campins

University of Central Florida

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Joseph M. Hahn

Lunar and Planetary Institute

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James Monie Bauer

California Institute of Technology

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