This issue of the Technical Digest features articles on planetary science at APL. On the front cover are images of Mars and on the back, Titan, two of the bodies in the solar system that are being investigated to study the origins of life. The APL CRISM (Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometers for Mars) instrument is searching for water on Mars by creating IR spectral maps of the entire surface (the false-color map next to Mars shows how much of Mars has already been covered). The small near-IR image of Titan (false-color) shows landforms, which are mapped in great detail by the Cassini/Huygens radar mapper and display evidence of hydrocarbon lakes. APL scientists are leading investigations of both Mars and Titan, as described in this issue.
Planetary Science at APL Takes OffH. A. Weaver Jr. and A. F. Cheng |
Linear Structures on Eros and Other Small BodiesD. L. Buczkowski |
An Introduction to Near-Earth ObjectsA. S. Rivkin |
Comet Chemistry: Obtaining Clues to the Formation and Evolution of the Solar System with High-Resolution Infrared SpectroscopyN. Dello Russo, H. A. Weaver Jr., C. M. Lisse, and R. J. Vervack Jr. |
The Exploration of TitanR. D. Lorenz |
Investigating Martian History with the CRISM Imaging SpectrometerS. L. Murchie, K. J. Heffernan, P. D. Bedini, D. C. Humm, P. L. Thompson, J. Lees, M. J. Wirzburger, H. Darlington, J. D. Boldt, K. Strohbehn, D. A. Lohr, J. R. Hayes, F. P. Seelos, T. H. Choo, J. A. McGovern, E. Malaret, C. Hash, P. J. Cavender, D. L. Buczkowski, M. F. Morgan, K. D. Seelos, and H. W. Taylor |
Planetary Materials Research at APLN. L. Chabot, C. M. Corrigan, C. A. Hibbitts, and J. B. Plescia |
Solar System Exploration: A Vision for the Next 100 YearsR. L. McNutt Jr. |
MISCELLANEAAPL Achievement Awards and PrizesL. L. Maier-Tyler |
MISCELLANEAPublications, Presentations, Conferences with Proceedings, and ColloquiaCompiled by L. M. Mercer |