Timothy Jay Parker
University of Arizona
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Featured researches published by Timothy Jay Parker.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 1992
Victor R. Baker; Goro Komatsu; Timothy Jay Parker; V. C. Gulick; Jeffrey S. Kargel; J. S. Lewis
A preliminary survey of Magellan imagery reveals more than 200 newly discovered relic channel and valley landform complexes. For purposes of discussion the channels can be classed as simple, complex, and compound. Integrated valleys also occur. Simple channels include (1) sinuous rules that closely resemble their lunar counterparts and (2) a newly recognized long sinuous form of high width-to-depth ratio and remarkably constant width. Herein designated canali, the most spectacular of these channels is 6800 km long. One of the compound channels, an outflow complex in Lada Terra, extends over 1200 km and is up to 30 km wide. Streamlined hills and spill relationships at a cross-axial ridge are similar to features in flood channels. Venusian channels have a global distribution with most of the large canali-type channels developed on volcanic plains. Alternative hypotheses for the channel-forming processes include genesis by the following erosive fluids: ultramafic silicate melts, sulfur, and carbonate lavas. Each of these causative agents has profound implications for Venusian planetology. The remote possibility of an aqueous origin, indicated by apparent regime behavior of the active channeling process, cannot be excluded with absolute certainty.
AIAA/AAS Astrodynamics Specialist Conference and Exhibit | 2004
Philip Knocke; Geoffrey Wawrzyniak; Brian M. Kennedy; Prasun N. Desai; Timothy Jay Parker; Matthew P. Golombek; Thomas C. Duxbury; David Michael Kass
Landing dispersion estimates for the Mars Exploration Rover missions were key elements in the site targeting process and in the evaluation of landing risk. This paper addresses the process and results of the landing dispersion analyses performed for both Spirit and Opportunity. The several contributors to landing dispersions (navigation and atmospheric uncertainties, spacecraft modeling, winds, and margins) are discussed, as are the analysis tools used. JPLs MarsLS program, a MATLAB-based landing dispersion visualization and statistical analysis tool, was used to calculate the probability of landing within hazardous areas. By convolving this with the probability of landing within flight system limits (in-spec landing) for each hazard area, a single overall measure of landing risk was calculated for each landing ellipse. In-spec probability contours were also generated, allowing a more synoptic view of site risks, illustrating the sensitivity to changes in landing location, and quantifying the possible consequences of anomalies such as incomplete maneuvers. Data and products required to support these analyses are described, including the landing footprints calculated by NASA Langleys POST program and JPLs AEPL program, cartographically registered base maps and hazard maps, and flight system estimates of in-spec landing probabilities for each hazard terrain type. Various factors encountered during operations, including evolving navigation estimates and changing atmospheric models, are discussed and final landing points are compared with approach estimates.
Archive | 2016
Marjorie A. Chan; Paul W. Jewell; Timothy Jay Parker; Jens Ormö; Chris Okubo; Goro Komatsu
Abstract Geomorphic confirmation for a putative ancient Mars ocean relies on analog comparisons of coastal-like features such as shoreline feature attributes and temporal scales of process formation. Pleistocene Lake Bonneville is one of the few large, geologically young, terrestrial lake systems that exemplify well-preserved shoreline characteristics that formed quickly, on the order of a thousand years or less. Studies of Lake Bonneville provide two essential analog considerations for interpreting shorelines on Mars: (1) morphological variations in expression depend on constructional vs erosional processes, and (2) shorelines are not always correlative at an equipotential elevation across a basin due to isostasy, heat flow, wave setup, fetch, and other factors. Although other large terrestrial lake systems display supporting evidence for geomorphic comparisons, Lake Bonneville encompasses the most integrated examples of preserved coastal features related to basin history, sediment supply, climate, and fetch, all within the context of a detailed hydrograph. These collective terrestrial lessons provide a framework to evaluate possible boundary conditions for ancient Mars hydrology and large water body environmental feedbacks. This knowledge of shoreline characteristics, processes, and environments can support explorations of habitable environments and guide future mission explorations.
Icarus | 1993
Goro Komatsu; Victor R. Baker; V. C. Gulick; Timothy Jay Parker
Archive | 2000
Victor R. Baker; V. C. Gulick; Timothy Jay Parker
Archive | 1991
James W. Head; John E. Guest; Gerald G. Schaber; K. Magee Roberts; David A. Senske; A. T. Basilevsky; R. Stephen Saunders; A. de Charon; Timothy Jay Parker; B.-. Klose; Betina Pavri; Edwin D. De Jong
Archive | 2009
Kenneth S. Edgett; Michael A. Ravine; Michael A. Caplinger; F. T. Ghaemi; J. A. Schaffner; Michael C. Malin; Jennifer Baker; Dan Dibiase; J. Laramee; J. N. Maki; Reg G. Willson; James F. Bell; James F. Cameron; William E. Dietrich; Laurence J. Edwards; Bernard Hallet; Kenneth E. Herkenhoff; Ezat Heydari; Linda C. Kah; Mark T. Lemmon; M. E. Minitti; Timothy S. Olson; Timothy Jay Parker; Scott K. Rowland; Juergen Schieber; R. Sullivan; Dawn Y. Sumner; Peter C. Thomas; Robin Aileen Yingst
Archive | 2008
Matthew P. Golombek; Joshua A. Grant; Ashwin R. Vasavada; Mary Watkins; Eldar Zeev Noe Dobrea; J. L. Griffes; Timothy Jay Parker
Archive | 2011
Matthew P. Golombek; Joshua A. Grant; Ashwin R. Vasavada; John P. Grotzinger; Mary Watkins; Devin Kipp; Eldar Zeev Noe Dobrea; J. L. Griffes; Timothy Jay Parker
Archive | 2009
Matthew P. Golombek; Joshua A. Grant; Ashwin R. Vasavada; John P. Grotzinger; Mary Watkins; Devin Kipp; Eldar Zeev Noe Dobrea; J. L. Griffes; Timothy Jay Parker