Matching Items (12)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

ContributorsSamuel, Christopher (Performer) / Ross, Richard (Performer) / Koloch, Bradley (Performer) / Dowell, Barry (Performer) / Shryock, Darin W. (Performer) / Purcell-Wagner, Mary (Performer) / Graduate Chorale (Performer) / Recital Chorale (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1989-04-13
ContributorsKoloch, Bradley (Performer) / Robinson, Mark (Performer) / Shaffer, Richard (Performer) / Woodrow, Marie (Performer) / Samuel, Christopher (Performer) / Listerud, L. Brian (Performer) / Graduate Chorale (Performer) / Recital Chorale (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1989-11-16
ContributorsWeber, Steven T (Performer) / Robinson, Mark (Performer) / Copeland, Jill (Performer) / Darrough, Galen P. (Performer) / Nemko, Deborah (Performer) / Arizona Statesmen (Performer) / Women's Choir (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1990-04-26
ContributorsRobinson, Mark (Conductor) / Shryock, Darin W. (Conductor) / Shaffer, Richard (Conductor) / Topping, David (Conductor) / Engelson, Robert (Performer) / Kelly, Kathleen (Performer) / Graduate Chorale (Performer) / Recital Chorale (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1989-02-23
157585-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Jupiter’s moon Europa is an active target of research because of its unique geology and its potential for habitability. Europa’s icy chaos disrupts and transforms the previous terrain, suggesting melting is involved. Chaos occurs alongside several types of endogenic surface features. These microfeatures are under <100 km2 in area and

Jupiter’s moon Europa is an active target of research because of its unique geology and its potential for habitability. Europa’s icy chaos disrupts and transforms the previous terrain, suggesting melting is involved. Chaos occurs alongside several types of endogenic surface features. These microfeatures are under <100 km2 in area and include uplifts and domes, pits, spots, and hybrid features. The distribution of microfeatures is known in the ~10% of the Europa’s surface that are covered by the regional mosaics (“RegMaps”). The efforts to connect microfeature formation to any kind of heat transport in Europa are confounded because microfeatures are difficult to identify outside of RegMaps because of low image resolutions. Finding microfeatures outside of RegMaps would provide new observational constraints for microfeature formation models.

First, I mapped microfeatures across four of Europa’s RegMaps and validated them against other mapping datasets. Microchaos features are the most numerous, followed by pits, domes, then hybrids. Spots are the least common features, and the smallest. Next, I mapped features in low-resolution images that covered the E15RegMap01 area to determine error rates and sources of omission or misclassification for features mapped in low-resolution images. Of all features originally mapped in the RegMap, pits and domes were the least likely to be re-mapped or positively identified (24.2% and 5%, respectively). Chaos, spots, and hybrids were accurately classified over 70% of the time. Quantitatively classifying these features using discriminant function analysis yielded comparable values of accuracy when compared to a human mapper. Finally, nearest-neighbor clustering analyses were used to show that pits are clustered in all regions, while chaos, domes, and hybrids vary in terms of their spatial clustering.

This work suggests that the most likely processes for microfeature formations is either the evolution of liquid water sills within Europa’s ice shell or cryovolcanism. Future work extending to more areas outside of the RegMaps can further refine microfeature formation models. The detection of liquid water at or near the surface is a major goal of multiple upcoming Europa missions; this work provides predictions that can be directly tested by these missions to maximize their scientific return.
ContributorsNoviello, Jessica (Author) / Rhoden, Alyssa R (Thesis advisor) / Christensen, Philip R. (Philip Russel) (Thesis advisor) / Williams, David A. (Committee member) / Robinson, Mark (Committee member) / Scowen, Paul (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
161915-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The central question of my dissertation is "How old are the inner moons of Saturn?" This question is of critical importance for the refinement of how solar systems and giant planet systems form and evolve. One of the most direct ways to test the ages of a planet's surface is

The central question of my dissertation is "How old are the inner moons of Saturn?" This question is of critical importance for the refinement of how solar systems and giant planet systems form and evolve. One of the most direct ways to test the ages of a planet's surface is through the use of impact craters. Here I utilize images from the Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) to count the craters on the mid-sized moons of Saturn, Tethys and Dione. I present a statistical analysis of the craters and the likely impactor sources that crated these craters. On Tethys I find that the impact craters can be explained by a planetocentric source that is local to the Saturnian system and is not found elsewhere in the outer planets. I also find that the majority of mapped regions are likely close in age. On Dione, I have mapped four areas at a regional-scale resolution ( ~ 200 m/ pix) and have found that resurfacing has greatly affected the small crater population and that the overall size-frequency distribution of craters is most representative of a planetocentric source unique to Saturn. Elliptical craters provide another means of assessing the bombardment environment around Saturn, as they record the primary direction of the object that created the crater upon impact on the surface. I have mapped these craters on Tethys and Dione, to analyze the global distributions of these craters and their orientations. Across both satellites, I find that in the equatorial regions between 30° N and 30°S in latitude, the orientations of the elliptical craters are consistent with an East/West orientation for their direction, which also is suggestive of a local planetocentric source. Throughout the main three studies presented in this dissertation I find that the main impactor source is a planetocentric source that is unique to Saturn and is not seen on the moons of the other giant planets.
ContributorsFerguson, Sierra Nichole (Author) / Rhoden, Alyssa R (Thesis advisor) / Desch, Steven J (Thesis advisor) / Robinson, Mark (Committee member) / Williams, David (Committee member) / Bose, Maitrayee (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
ContributorsGreen, Stephen J. (Performer) / Biffle, George (Performer) / Meredith, Steven (Performer) / Fuller, Charles L. (Performer) / Shryock, Darin W. (Performer) / Kelly, Kathleen (Performer) / Graduate Chorale (Performer) / Recital Chorale (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1988-11-17
ContributorsDarrough, Galen P. (Performer) / Engelson, Robert (Performer) / Weber, Steven T (Performer) / Yom, Chin-Seup (Performer) / Shryock, Darin W. (Performer) / Samuel, Christopher (Performer) / Graduate Chorale (Performer) / Recital Chorale (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1988-10-06
ContributorsDarrough, Galen P. (Performer) / Peterson, Craig C. (Performer) / Shryock, Darin W. (Performer) / Stocker, David, 1939- (Performer) / University Choir (Performer) / Vocal Jazz Choir (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1988-11-20
ContributorsMeredith, Steve (Performer) / Fuller, Charles L. (Performer) / Ethridge, Brandon (Performer) / Hloucal, Amy (Performer) / Robinson, Mark (Performer) / Women's Choir (Performer) / Arizona Statesmen (Performer) / ASU Library. Music Library (Publisher)
Created1989-03-02