870 research outputs found
Thermal emission measurements (5-25 microns) of Hawaiian palagonitic soils with implications for Mars
Careful laboratory studies have shown that the coloring agent in Mars analog Hawaiian palagonitic soils is nanophase iron oxide. We have measured the emissivity of two Mauna Kea palagonitic soils whose transmission spectra exhibit different spectral features and of a thermally-altered volcanic tephra sample that exhibits a wide range of crystallinity and degree of alteration (from black cinders to fully hematitic). Both of these samples may represent analogs for formation mechanisms involving the production of highly-altered secondary weathering products on Mars. The emission spectra of all samples were measured at the TES spectroscopy laboratory at Arizona State University. The data were converted to emissivity using blackbody measurements combined with measurements of each sample at different temperatures
High spatial resolution telescopic multispectral imaging and spectroscopy of the Moon. 1: The Serenitatis/Tranquillitatis border region
The region of the moon near the border between Mare Serenitatis and Mare Tranquillitatis is one of the most geologically and compositionally complex areas of the nearside. The geologic history of this region has been shaped by impacts of widely-varying spatial scale and temporal occurrence, by volcanism of variable style and composition with time, and by limited tectonism. We have been studying this region as part of a larger multi remote sensing technique effort to understand the composition, morphology, geology, and stratigraphy of the moon at spatial scales of 2 km or less. The effort has been aided by the proximity of this area to the Apollo 11, 15, and 17 landing sites and by the occurrence of one of the primary lunar spectroscopic 'standard areas' within our scene (MS2). Here, some of the findings from the multispectral imaging and spectroscopy part of this effort are reported
High resolution visible to short-wave near-infrared CCD spectra of Mars during 1990
The 0.4 to 1.0 micron spectrum of Mars is dominated by a steep red, relatively featureless spectral slope. Earlier lower spectral observations interpreted the red color and the lack of absorption features in the spectra as evidence of poorly crystalline ferric oxide minerals. More recent higher spectral resolution observations and reinterpretations of older data sets have revealed measureable spectral structure, however. For example, absorption features near 0.65 and 0.86 micron were detected and spatially mapped in data obtained during the 1988 opposition. These absorptions were interpreted as evidence for crystalline hematite on Mars, occuring as an accessory phase in abundances of 3 to 6 percent in the soil. We are attempting to verify the existence of these subtle crystalline Fe(3+) absorption features and to map their spatial distribution in regions of the planet not imaged in 1988. During the 1990 opposition, we obtained imaging spectroscopic data of Mars from the University of Hawaii 2.24 m telescope at Mauna Kea Observatory. The data were obtained with the Wide Field Grism Spectrograph (WFGS), which uses an 800 x 800 CCD and a transmission grating ruled on a prism. We used a grating blazed at 4800 A in first order to obtain data from 0.50 to 0.94 micron at a spectral resolution of R = 200 to 350. The moon/Mars slit design used had projected dimensions of 0.29 x 153 inches, allowing for high spectral resolution and adequate cross-slit spatial sampling of the Martian disk
Transmission measurements (4000-400 cm(exp -1), 2.5-25 microns) of crystalline ferric oxides and ferric oxyhydroxides: Implications for Mars
Transmission spectra of three ferric oxides (two alpha-Fe2O3 samples and one gamma-Fe2O3 sample) and two ferric oxyhydroxides (alpha-FeOOH and gamma-FeOOH) were measured. This preliminary study has demonstrated that crystalline ferric oxides and ferric oxyhydroxides exhibit complex spectral features at thermal wavelengths. Some of these features suggest that thermal infrared observations of Mars can provide significant insight into the ferric mineralogy of that planet. The results of this study suggest that emissivity spectra of crystalline ferric oxides and ferric oxyhydroxides may prove quite important for the interpretation of thermal infrared spectral observations of Mars
Diaspores and related hydroxides' Spectral-compositional properties and implications for Mars
Differences in spectral reflectance properties (0.3-26 μm) of a suite of metal hydroxides (gibbsite, böhmite, diaspore, goethite, and manganite) have been found to be a function of both structural and compositional differences between these minerals. The properties of the O-H stretching fundamental bands in particular can be used to identify the presence of these minerals and to discriminate isostructural and heteromorphous species. This is due to the fact that the O-H stretching fundamental bands are very intense in these minerals and occur at longer wavelengths than those of other minerals, and also due to the fact that these metal hydroxides lack strong absorption bands at shorter wavelengths. In the case of dimorphous minerals such as böhmite (ϒ-A1O(OH)) and diaspore (α-A1O(OH)), differences in the wavelength positions of O-H stretching fundamental bands can be of the order of 0.1-0.3 μm. Reflectance spectra of metal hydroxide-bearing "ores" (bauxites) and impure samples indicate that accessory phases, in particular iron-bearing minerals, have a more pronounced eftect on spectral reflectance toward shorter wavelengths. Intimate mixtures of diaspore + orthopyroxene indicate that diaspore abundances as low as 5 wt% (or less) can be detected by the appearance of characteristic absorption bands at 3.33 and 3.41μm . This finding has particular relevance to the study of near-infrared spectra of Mars, in that the conditions which favor diaspore formation on the Earth may have also been prevalent early in Mars' history. If diaspore did form on Mars in the past, it is likely to have persisted to the present.This study was supported by the University of Winnipeg through a start-up grant and research grant through the Discretionary Grants Program (to E.A.C.) and a NASA Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program grant (to J.F.B.; NAG5-4333This study was supported by the University of Winnipeg through a start-up grant and research grant through
the Discretionary 'Grants Program (to E.A.C.) and a NASA Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program grant
(to J.F.B.; NAG5-433
Hematite formed from pyroxene on Mars by meteoritic impact
In earlier work, we showed using Mossbauer data that the mineralogy of iron-bearing phases in impact melt rocks from Manicouagan Crater (Quebec, Canada) is to a first approximation hematite and pyroxene. The visible and near-IR reflectivity data for these impact melt rocks show a continuous trend in band position from approximately 850 to approximately 1000 nm, which corresponds to the positions for the hematite and pyroxene endmembers, respectively. The oxidation is thought to occur shortly after the impact when oxidizing vapors and/or solutions reacted with the impact melt which was below its solidus temperature but still relatively hot. The reflectance data have important implications for Mars because band positions which occur between approximately 850 and 1000 nm bands observed for Mars can be attributed to hematite-pyroxene assemblages and not necessarily to different ferric mineralogy. Because oxidation of impact melt rocks at Manicouagan is thought to occur subsolidus, precursors for the hematite include oxides such as magnetite and ilmenite and silicates such as pyroxene and olivine. To determine if the Manicouagan impact-melt rocks are related to each other by simple thermal subsolidus oxidation, we calcined in air a relatively unoxidized Manicouagan impact-melt rock (MAN-74-608A). Previous work has shown that np-Hm (nanophase hematite) particles can be derived by calcination of iron-bearing silicates
Absolute calibration and atmospheric versus mineralogic origin of absorption features in 2.0 to 2.5 micron Mars spectra obtained during 1993
We obtained new high resolution reflectance spectra of Mars during the 1993 opposition from Mauna Kea Observatory using the UKIRT CGS4 spectrometer. Fifty spectra of 1600-2000 km surface regions and a number of standard star spectra were obtained in the 2.04 to 2.44 micron wavelength region on 4 February 1993 UT. Near-simultaneous observations of bright standard stars were used to perform terrestrial atmospheric corrections and an absolute flux calibration. Using the known magnitude of the stars and assuming blackbody continuum behavior, the flux from Mars could be derived. A radiative transfer model and the HITRAN spectral line data base were used to compute atmospheric transmission spectra for Mars and the Earth in order to simulate the contributions of these atmospheres to our observed data. Also, we examined the ATMOS solar spectrum in the near-IR to try to identify absorption features in the spectrum of the Sun that could be misinterpreted as Mars features. Eleven absorption features were detected in our Mars spectra. Our data provide no conclusive identification of the mineralogy responsible for the absorption features we detected. However, examination of terrestrial spectral libraries and previous high spectral resolution mineral studies indicates that the most likely origin of these features is either CO3(sup 2-), HCO3(-), or HSO4(-) anions in framework silicates or possibly (Fe, Mg)-OH bonds in sheet silicates
Multispectral Imaging from Mars PATHFINDER
The Imager for Mars Pathfinder (IMP) was a mast-mounted instrument on the Mars Pathfinder lander which landed on Mars Ares Vallis floodplain on July 4, 1997. During the 83 sols of Mars Pathfinders landed operations, the IMP collected over 16,600 images. Multispectral images were collected using twelve narrowband filters at wavelengths between 400 and 1000 nm in the visible and near infrared (VNIR) range. The IMP provided VNIR spectra of the materials surrounding the lander including rocks, bright soils, dark soils, and atmospheric observations. During the primary mission, only a single primary rock spectral class, Gray Rock, was recognized; since then, Black Rock, has been identified. The Black Rock spectra have a stronger absorption at longer wavelengths than do Gray Rock spectra. A number of coated rocks have also been described, the Red and Maroon Rock classes, and perhaps indurated soils in the form of the Pink Rock class. A number of different soil types were also recognized with the primary ones being Bright Red Drift, Dark Soil, Brown Soil, and Disturbed Soil. Examination of spectral parameter plots indicated two trends which were interpreted as representing alteration products formed in at least two different environmental epochs of the Ares Vallis area. Subsequent analysis of the data and comparison with terrestrial analogs have supported the interpretation that the rock coatings provide evidence of earlier martian environments. However, the presence of relatively uncoated examples of the Gray and Black rock classes indicate that relatively unweathered materials can persist on the martian surface
Sulfate-rich eolian and wet interdune deposits, Erebus crater, Meridiani Planum, Mars
This study investigates three bedrock exposures at Erebus crater, an ~ 300 m diameter crater approximately 4 km south of Endurance crater on Mars. These outcrops, called Olympia, Payson, and Yavapai, provide additional evidence in support of the dune–interdune model proposed for the formation of the deposits at the Opportunity landing site in Meridiani Planum. There is evidence for greater involvement of liquid water in the Olympia outcrop exposures than was observed in Eagle or Endurance craters. The Olympia outcrop likely formed in a wet interdune and sand sheet environment. The facies observed within the Payson outcrop, which is likely stratigraphically above the Olympia outcrop, indicate that it was deposited in a damp-wet interdune, sand sheet, and eolian dune environment. The Yavapai outcrop, which likely stratigraphically overlies the Payson outcrop, indicates that it was deposited in primarily a sand sheet environment and also potentially in an eolian dune environment. These three outcrop exposures may indicate an overall drying-upward trend spanning the stratigraphic section from its base at the Olympia outcrop to its top at the Yavapai outcrop. This contrasts with the wetting-upward trend seen in Endurance and Eagle craters. Thus, the series of outcrops seen at Meridiani by Opportunity may constitute a full climatic cycle, evolving from dry to wet to dry conditions
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