Isolation of seismic signal from InSight/SEIS-SP microseismometer measurements

Space Science Reviews Springer 214:5 (2018) 95

Authors:

J Hurley, N Murdoch, NA Teanby, Neil Bowles, Tristram J Warren, Simon B Calcutt, D Mimoun, WT Pike

Abstract:

The InSight mission is due to launch in May 2018, carrying a payload of novel instruments designed and tested to probe the interior of Mars whilst deployed directly on the Martian regolith and partially isolated from the Martian environment by the Wind and Thermal Shield. Central to this payload is the seismometry package SEIS consisting of two seismometers, which is supported by a suite of environmental/meteorological sensors (Temperature and Wind Sensor for InSight TWINS; and Auxiliary Payload Sensor Suite APSS). In this work, an optimal estimations inversion scheme which aims to decorrelate the short-period seismometer (SEIS-SP) signal due to seismic activity alone from the environmental signal and random noise is detailed, and tested on both simulated and Viking data. This scheme also applies a module to identify measurements contaminated by Single Event Phenomena (SEP). This scheme will be deployed as the pre-processing pipeline for all SEIS-SP data prior to release to the scientific community for analysis.

The ARIEL space mission

Proceedings of SPIE Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers 10698 (2018)

Authors:

E Pascale, N Bezawada, J Barstow, J-P Beaulieu, Neil Bowles, V Coudé Du Foresto, A Coustenis, L Decin, P Drossart, P Eccleston, T Encrenaz, F Forget, M Griffin, M Güdel, P Hartogh, A Heske, P-O Lagage, J Leconte, P Malaguti, G Micela, K Middleton, M Min, A Moneti, JC Morales, M Ollivier, E Pace, G Pilbratt, L Puig, M Rataj, T Ray, I Ribas, M Rocchetto, S Sarkar, F Selsis, W Taylor, J Tennyson, G Tinetti, D Turrini, B Vandenbussche, O Venot, IP Waldmann, P Wolkenberg, GS Wright, M-R Zapatero Osorio, T Zingales, A Papageorgiou, L Mugnai

Abstract:

The Atmospheric Remote-Sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey, ARIEL, has been selected to be the next M4 space mission in the ESA Cosmic Vision programme. From launch in 2028, and during the following 4 years of operation, ARIEL will perform precise spectroscopy of the atmospheres of about 1000 known transiting exoplanets using its metre-class telescope, a three-band photometer and three spectrometers that will cover the 0.5 μm to 7.8 μm region of the electromagnetic spectrum. The payload is designed to perform primary and secondary transit spectroscopy, and to measure spectrally resolved phase curves with a stability of < 100 ppm (goal 10 ppm). Observing from an L2 orbit, ARIEL will provide the first statistically significant spectroscopic survey of hot and warm planets. These are an ideal laboratory in which to study the chemistry, the formation and the evolution processes of exoplanets, to constrain the thermodynamics, composition and structure of their atmospheres, and to investigate the properties of the clouds.

The DREAMS experiment flown on the ExoMars 2016 mission for the study of Martian environment during the dust storm season

MEASUREMENT 122 (2018) 484-493

Authors:

C Bettanini, F Esposito, S Debei, C Molfese, G Colombatti, A Aboudan, JR Brucato, F Cortecchia, G Di Achille, GP Guizzo, E Friso, F Ferri, L Marty, V Mennella, R Molinaro, P Schipani, S Silvestro, R Mugnuolo, S Pirrotta, E Marchetti, A-M Harri, F Montmessin, C Wilson, I Arruego Rodriguez, S Abbaki, V Apestigue, G Bellucci, J-J Berthelier, SB Calcutt, F Forget, M Genzer, P Gilbert, H Haukka, JJ Jimenez, S Jimenez, J-L Josset, O Karatekin, G Landis, R Lorenz, J Martinez, D Moehlmann, D Moirin, E Palomba, M Patel, J-P Pommereau, CI Popa, S Rafkin, P Rannou, NO Renno, W Schmidt, F Simoes, A Spiga, F Valero, L Vazquez, F Vivat, O Witasse, Int DREAMS Team

The DREAMS experiment flown on the ExoMars 2016 mission for the study of Martian environment during the dust storm season

Measurement Elsevier 122 (2018) 484-493

Authors:

C Bettanini, F Esposito, S Debei, C Molfese, G Colombatti, A Aboudan, JR Brucato, F Cortecchia, G Di Achille, GP Guizzo, E Friso, F Ferri, L Marty, V Mennella, R Molinaro, P Schipani, S Silvestro, R Mugnuolo, S Pirrotta, E Marchetti, The International DREAMS Team, A-M Harri, F Montmessin, C Wilson, I Arruego Rodríguez, S Abbaki, V Apestigue, G Bellucci, J-J Berthelier, SB Calcutt, F Forget, M Genzer, P Gilbert, H Haukka, JJ Jiménez, S Jiménez, J-L Josset, O Karatekin, G Landis, R Lorenz, J Martinez, D Möhlmann, D Moirin, E Palomba, M Patel, J-P Pommereau, CI Popa, S Rafkin, P Rannou, NO Renno, W Schmidt, F Simoes, A Spiga, F Valero, L Vázquez, F Vivat, O Witasse

Uranus's northern polar cap in 2014

Geophysical Research Letters Wiley (2018)

Authors:

Daniel Toledo Carrasco, Patrick GJ Irwin, NA Teanby, AA Simon, MH Wong, GS Orton

Abstract:

In October and November 2014, spectra covering the 1.436 – 1.863-μm wavelength range from the SINFONI Integral Field Unit Spectrometer on the Very Large Telescope showed the presence of a vast bright North polar cap on Uranus, extending northward from about 40ºN and at all longitudes observed. The feature, first detected in August 2014 from Keck telescope images, has a morphology very similar to the southern polar cap that was seen to fade before the 2007 equinox. At strong methane-absorbing wavelengths (for which only the high troposphere or stratosphere is sampled) the feature is not visible, indicating that it is not a stratospheric phenomenon. We show that the observed northern bright polar cap results mainly from a decrease in the tropospheric methane mixing ratio, rather than from a possible latitudinal variation of the optical properties or abundance of aerosol, implying an increase in polar downwelling near the tropopause level.