Evidence for crater ejecta on Venus tessera terrain from Earth-based radar images

•Venus radar maps from 1988 and 2012 are combined to improve feature detection.•Same-sense polarization echoes are a sensitive measure of fine-grained material.•The radar images provide evidence of tessera mantling by impact ejecta.•Radar data can characterize highlands for remote studies and lander...

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Veröffentlicht in:Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 2015-04, Vol.250, p.123-130
Hauptverfasser: Campbell, Bruce A., Campbell, Donald B., Morgan, Gareth A., Carter, Lynn M., Nolan, Michael C., Chandler, John F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Venus radar maps from 1988 and 2012 are combined to improve feature detection.•Same-sense polarization echoes are a sensitive measure of fine-grained material.•The radar images provide evidence of tessera mantling by impact ejecta.•Radar data can characterize highlands for remote studies and lander site selection. We combine Earth-based radar maps of Venus from the 1988 and 2012 inferior conjunctions, which had similar viewing geometries. Processing of both datasets with better image focusing and co-registration techniques, and summing over multiple looks, yields maps with 1–2km spatial resolution and improved signal to noise ratio, especially in the weaker same-sense circular (SC) polarization. The SC maps are unique to Earth-based observations, and offer a different view of surface properties from orbital mapping using same-sense linear (HH or VV) polarization. Highland or tessera terrains on Venus, which may retain a record of crustal differentiation and processes occurring prior to the loss of water, are of great interest for future spacecraft landings. The Earth-based radar images reveal multiple examples of tessera mantling by impact “parabolas” or “haloes”, and can extend mapping of locally thick material from Magellan data by revealing thinner deposits over much larger areas. Of particular interest is an ejecta deposit from Stuart crater that we infer to mantle much of eastern Alpha Regio. Some radar-dark tessera occurrences may indicate sediments that are trapped for longer periods than in the plains. We suggest that such radar information is important for interpretation of orbital infrared data and selection of future tessera landing sites.
ISSN:0019-1035
1090-2643
DOI:10.1016/j.icarus.2014.11.025