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Publications

Filter Total Items: 915

Ice and debris in the fretted terrain, Mars

Viking moderate- and high-resolution images along the northern highland margin were studied monoscopically and stereoscopically to contribute to an understanding of the development of fretted terrain. Results support the hypothesis that the fretting process involved flow facilitated by interstitial ice. The process apparently continued for a long period of time, and debris-apron formation shaped t
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta

The Galilean satellite geological mapping program

The Galilean Satellite Geological Mapping Program was established to illuminate detailed geologic relations on the four large satellites of Jupiter. The program involves about 40 investigators from various universities, reseach institutes, and government offices in the United Sttes, England, Germany, and Italy. A total of 24 researchers have been assigned to map 10 quadrangles on Ganymede, 15 to m
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta

Channels and valleys on Mars

The discovery of channels, valleys, and related features of aqueous origin on Mars is of profound importance in comparative planetology. Models of the evolution of planetary surfaces and atmospheres must be reconciled with the diversity, abundance, and origins of channels and valleys on Mars. The term “channel” is properly restricted to those Martian troughs that display at least some evidence of
Authors

Geology, past and future: Planetary geology

No abstract available.
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta

Chryse Basin channels: low-gradients and ponded flows.

Gradients on the floors of the Martian outflow channels that are derived from radar-elevation profiles across Lunae Planum and Chryse Basin have much lower values than those obtained from the U.S. Geological Survey's topographic map. Whereas the gradients of Maja and Ares Valles are similar to those of the catastrophic flood channels in the Scablands of Washington State, the gradients of Simud and
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta, H.M. Ferguson

Ice sculpture in the Martian outflow channels

Many landforms in Martian outflow channels have characteristics that suggest sculpture by glaciers, ice streams, or ice sheets. Viking Orbiter and terrestrial satellite images were examined at similar resolution to compare features of the Martian outflow channels to features produced by the movement of ice on earth. Many resemblances were found. They include the anastomoses, sinuosities, and U‐sha
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta

Implementation of digital subtraction angiography with a synchrotron x-ray beam

The intense synchrotron radiation produced by wiggler magnets at electron storage rings provides a new source of x-rays highly suited to iodine K-edge digital subtraction angiography. The monochromaticity and tunability provide maximum sensitivity to intraarterial iodine and virtually eliminate contrast due to soft tissue and bone. Visualization of arteries, in particular the coronary arteries, by
Authors
H.D. Zeman, E.B. Hughes, L.E. Campbell, R. Hofstadter, Randolph L. Kirk, T.J. Krolicki, J. Rolfe, J.P. Stone, S. Wilson, E. Rubenstein, A.C. Thompson, J.T. Walton

The geology of Europa

The map units and lineations of Europa are detailed, and the geologic processes, and history, and thick and thin ice models of the satellite are discussed. It is concluded that Europa lacks evidence of a horizontally stratified crust; the geology appears characterized by disruption of the crust and intrusions into an icy shell. The surface consists of plains and mottled terrain, the former being o
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta, Laurence A. Soderblom

Synchrotron radiation and its application to digital subtraction angiography

The intense synchrotron radiation produced at electron storage rings provides a new source of X-rays highly suited to iodine K-edge digital subtraction angiography. The high intensity and small angular divergence permit the radiation to be monochromatized by Bragg diffraction and made available in beams of small vertical size, of arbitrary horizontal width, and of tunable energy. The use of such b
Authors
E. Rubenstein, E.B. Hughes, L.E. Campbell, R. Hofstadter, Randolph L. Kirk, T.J. Krolicki, J.P. Stone, S. Wilson, H.D. Zeman, W.R. Brody

The geologic investigation of the Taurus-Littrow Valley; Apollo 17 landing site, with a section on Apollo 17 lunar surface photography

No abstract available.
Authors
Edward W. Wolfe, N. G. Bailey, Baerbel K. Lucchitta, W.R. Muehlberger, D. H. Scott, R. L. Sutton, H. G. Wilshire, R. M. Batson, K.B. Larson, R.L. Tyner

Mars and Earth: Comparison of cold-climate features

On Earth, glacial and periglacial features are common in areas of cold climate. On Mars, the temperature of the present-day surface is appropriate for permafrost, and the presence of water is suspected from data relating to the outgassing of the planet, from remote-sensing measurements over the polar caps and elsewhere on the Martian surface, and from recognition of fluvial morphological features
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta

Ridges and scarps in the equatorial belt of Mars

The morphology and distribution of ridges and scarps on Mars in the ± 30° latitude belt were investigated. Two distinct types of ridges were recognized. The first is long and linear, resembling mare ridges on the Moon; it occurs mostly in plains areas. The other is composed of short, anastomosing segments and occurs mostly in ancient cratered terrain and intervening plateaus. Where ridges are erod
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta, J.L. Klockenbrink