ESA Congrex home  
   
  Main page
  Topics
  Registration & Accommodation
  Programme
  Instructions Poster Presenters
  Social Event
  Call for Papers
  Calendar of Events
  Contact
  Venue
  LOC Conference Website
 
  Home page
  List of Events
  Esa Portal
 
International Conference on Comparative Planetology: Venus-Earth-Mars

PROGRAMME

Last update: 10 August 2009


Day 1 - Monday, 11 May 2009
13:00
Opening by Håkan Svedhem, ESLAB 2009 Programme Committee Chair

Welcome address by Richard Marsden, Head of the Research and Scientific Support department

Video message from David Southwood, ESA Director of Science
 
Introduction Lecture
Chair: H. Svedhem
13:15
Invited Tutorial
The Comparative Planetology, Climatology and Biology of Venus, Earth and Mars as Revealed by Past, Current and Future Space Missions
Taylor, F.W.
Oxford University (United Kingdom)
Session 1
Interior & Subsurface
Chairs: Sohl, Rosenblatt, Schumacher
14:15
Invited Tutorial
Presentation

Assessing the Structure of Planetary Interiors from Satellite and Ground-Based Geophysical Data: A Comparative Study of Venus, Earth and Mars
Rosenblatt, P.1; Dehant, V.1; Mocquet, A.2
1Bruxelles Royal Observatory (Belgium) 2 Nantes University (France)
14:45
A Simple Seismological Approach to Core Size Determination
Knapmeyer, M.
DLR (Germany)
15:05
Deep Vs. Shallow Origin of Gravity Anomalies, Topography and Volcanism on Earth, Venus and Mars
Werner, S.C.1; Steinberger, B.2; Torsvik, T.H.3
1Continental Shelf Geophysics Group; 2Geological Survey of Norway (Norway), Geological Survey of Norway (Norway); 3Center for Geodynamics, Geological Survey of Norway (Norway)
15:25
Presentation
Tectonics on a One-Plate Planet: The Spatial Variability of the Martian Elastic Lithosphere Thickness and a Comparison with Earth's Continents
Grott, M.; Breuer, D.
German Aerospace Center (Germany)
15:45
Coffee break
16:15
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Magnetic Fields and Planetary Dynamos
Christensen, U.R.
Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany)
16:45
Presentation
How to Kickstart Planets: On the Influence of the Intial Conditions
Ziethe, R.; Benkhoff, J.
ESA-ESTEC (Netherlands)
17:05
Presentation
Thermo-Chemical Convection and the Survival of Reservoirs of Dense Material in the Earth's Lower Mantle
Deschamps, F.; Tackley, P.J.
ETH Zurich (Switzerland)
17:25
Presentation
Modelling the Thermo-Chemical Evolution of the Interiors of Earth, Venus and Mars
Tackley, P.1; Nakagawa, T.2; Keller, T.2; Armann, M.2; Deschamps, F.2; Connolly, J.3
1ETH Zurich (Switzerland); 2Institut für Geophysik, ETH Zürich (Switzerland); 3Institute for Mineralogy and Petrology, ETH Zürich (Switzerland)
17:45
Discussion
18:10
End of Session
18:10
Welcome Reception
19:30
Bus Departure to Hotels

Day 2 - Tuesday, 12 May 2009
Session 2
Geology, Surface Chemistry and Mineralogy
Chairs: Basilevski, Rossi, Pinet
09:00
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Comparative View of Geology of Venus, Earth, and Mars
Basilevsky, A.1; Head, J.W.2
1Vernadsky Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry (Russian Federation); 2Department of Geological Sciences, Brown University (United States)
09:30
Tectonic Rifting on Earth, Mars, and Venus
Hauber, E.1; Grott, M.1; Kronberg, P.2
1DLR (Germany); 2TU Clausthal (Germany)
09:50
Presentation
Volcanic Rises and Upwelling: Hotspots on Venus, Earth and Mars
Stofan, E.1; Smrekar, S.E.2; Martin, P.3
1Proxemy Research/UCL (United States); 2Jet Propulsion Laboratory (United States); 3University of Durham (United Kingdom)
10:10
Presentation
The Geologic Evolution of Mars: Episodicity of Resurfacing Events and Ages from Cratering Analysis of Image Data and Correlation with Radiometric Ages of Martian Meteorites
Neukum, G.1; Basilevsky, A.T.2; Kneissl, T.1; Chapman, M.G.3; van Gasselt, S.1; Michael, G.1; Jaumann, R.4; Hoffmann, H.5; Lanz, J.6
1Freie Universität Berlin (Germany); 2Vernadsky Institute (Russian Federation); 3United States Geological Survey (United States); 4Freie Universität Berlin, German Aerospace Center (Germany); 5German Aerospace Center (Germany); 6Universität Stuttgart (Germany)
10:30
Coffee break
11:00
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Impact Cratering on Terrestrial Planetary Bodies
Ivanov, B.
Russian Academy of Sciences (Russian Federation)
11:30
Presentation
Some Features of the Earth, Venus and Mars Global Relief
Lazarev, E., Rodionova, J.
Sternberg State Astronomical Institute (Russia)
11:50
Presentation
Analogy between Gullies on Mars and on Earth: What Similarities? What Differences?
Mangold, N.1; Mangeney, A.2; Baratoux, D.3; Lucas, A.2; Bouchut, F.4
1CNRS/LPG Nantes (France); 2CNRS/IPGP (France); 3OMP/CNRS (France); 4ENS/CNRS (France)
12:10
Presentation
Formation of Chaotic Terrains on Mars by Melting of Sub-Surface Ice: Mars and Earth
Zegers, T.1; Oosthoek, J.H.P.2; Rossi, A.P.3; Schumacher, S.4; Blom, J.C.5
1Utrecht University (Netherlands); 2Dutch Geological Survey, TNO (Netherlands); 3ISSI (Switzerland); 4ESTEC (Netherlands); 5TU Delft (Netherlands)
12:30
Presentation
Comparative Views of Valley Networks on Mars from Mars Express Data and on Earth
Ansan, V.1; Mangold, N.2; Masson, P.3; Neukum, G.4
1LPGN - University de Nantes-UMR6112 (France); 2LPGN - University de Nantes-UMR6112 (Falkland Islands Malvinas); 3IDES- UMR4881 (France); 4FU-Berlin (Germany)
13:00
Lunch break
14:00
Presentation
The Crust of Mars
Poulet, F.1; Bibring, J.-P.2
1IAS (France); 2IAS University Paris Sud (France)
14:20
Presentation
Widespread Occurrence of Carbonate on Mars: Implications for Atmospheric Evolution
Palomba, E.1; Zinzi, A.2; Cloutis, E.3
1IFSI-INAF (Italy); 2Dipartimento di Fisica, Università de L’Aquila (Italy); 3University of Winnipeg (Canada)
14:50
Discussion
Session 3
Conditions for Life
Chairs: Gibson, Javaux
15:10
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Early Life on Earth and its Geological Context: Relevance for Mars
Westall, F.
CNRS-Orléans (France)
15:40
Coffee break
16:10
Presentation
Effects of Asteroid and Comet Impacts on the Atmospheric Evolution of Earth, Mars and Venus
Pham, L.B.S.; Karatekin, O.; Dehant, V.
Royal Observatory of Belgium (Belgium)
16:30
Presentation
Terrestrial Field Research on Organics and Biomolecules at Mars Analog Sites
Ehrenfreund, P.1; Quinn, R.2; Martins, Z.3; Sephton, M.3; Peeters, Z.4; van Sluis, K.5; Foing, B.6; Orzechowska, G.7; Becker, L.8; Brucato, J.9; Grunthaner, F.7; Gross, C.10; Thiel, C.11; Wendt, L.10
1Leiden Institute of Chemistry (Netherlands); 2SETI Institute (United States); 3ICL (United Kingdom); 4NASA Goddard (United States); 5University Delft (Netherlands); 6ESTEC (Netherlands); 7JPL (United States); 8John Hopkins (United States); 9INAF Arcetri (Italy); 10Freie Universität Berlin (Germany); 11MPI Goettingen (Germany)
16:50
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Extreme Life and Implications for Astrobiology
Amils, R.; Gomez, F.; González-Toril, E.; Rodríguez, N.; Aguilera, A.
Centro de Astrobiología (INTA-CSIC) (Spain)
17:20
Presentation
Solar Forcing and the Evolution of Water on Earth, Venus and Mars
Lundin, R.
Swedish Instititute of Space Physics (Sweden)
17:40
Discussion
18:00
Poster Sessions
19:45
Bus Departure to Hotels
 
Poster Sessions
 

Session 1 - Interior & Subsurface

P1.01
Information on the Interior of Mars, the Earth and Venus from Orbiters around these Terrestrial Planets
Rosenblatt, P.1; Dehant, V.1; Marty, J.C.2; Le Maistre, S.1; Van Hoolst, T.1
1Royal Observatory of Belgium (Belgium); 2Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (France)


P1.02
Insight into the Interior Structure of Mars from Forced Nutations
Rivoldini, A.1; Van Hoolst, T.2; Dehant, V.2; Verhoeven, O.3; Mocquet, A.3
1Observatoire Royal de Belgique (Belgium); 2Royal Observatory of Belgium (Belgium); 3Université de Nantes (France)


P1.03
The Spinel-Perovskite Phase Transition in the Martian Mantle
Michel, N.; Forni, O.
Université de Toulouse, UPS, CESR (France)


P1.04
Pressure Dependence of the Viscosity: Influence on the Thermal Evolution for Planets of Mars- and Earth-size
Noack, L.; Stamenkovic, V.; Breuer, D.
German Aerospace Center (DLR) (Germany)


P1.05
Viscosity Variations Due to the Influence of Partial Melt: Implications for the Thermal Evolution of Mars and Earth
Plesa, A.C.; Breuer, D.
German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Planetary Research (Germany)


P1.06
Mass-Radius Relations of Earth-like Planetary Bodies
Wagner, F.1; Sohl, F.2; Hussmann, H.2; Grott, M.2; Rauer, H.2
1German Aerospace Center (DLR) (Germany); 2DLR Berlin (Germany)


P1.07
Chaotic Terrains and What They Tell Us About the Geothermal Gradients on Mars and Earth
Schumacher, S.1; Zegers, T.E.2; Rossi, A.P.3
1ESA-ESTEC (Netherlands); 2Faculty of Geoscience, Utrecht University (Netherlands); 3International Space Science Institute (Switzerland)


P1.08
Comparative TDEM Sounding Study of Martian and Earth’s Frozen Rocks
Ozorovich, Y.; Lukomskiy, A.
Space Research Institute (Russian Federation)


P1.09
Reflection Systems for Planetary Geology: First ExoGeoLab Tests at ESTEC
Batenburg, P.1,2; Foing, B.H.1; Drijkoningen, G.3; Gill, E.2; Poulakis, P.4; Visentin, G.4; Page, J.1,4; Peters, S.1,6; Borst, A.1,6; Boche-Sauvan, L.1; Mahapatra, P.1; ExoGeoLab Team1
1ESTEC ExoGeoLab SRE-S (Netherlands); 2Delft TU Aerospace Faculty (Netherlands); 3Delft TU Geology and Civil Engineering (Netherlands); 4ESTEC TEC Technology Directorate (Netherlands)


Session 2 - Geology, Surface Chemistry and Mineralogy

P2.01
Evidences of Karst Landforms and Processes on an Evaporite Dome in East Tithonium Chasma (Mars)
Baioni, D.1; Zupan Hajna, N.2; Wezel, F.C.1
1Urbino University (Italy); 2Karst Research Institute ZRC SAZU (Slovenia)


P2.02
The Enhancement of Mars (MOLA) and Earth (SRTM) Digital Elevation Data Using Geophysical Filtering and Image Processing Techniques
Chacksfield, B.; Tragheim, D.G.
British Geological Survey (United Kingdom)


P2.03
Relief-Forming Potential of Terrestrial Planets Predicted by the Wave Planetology
Kochemasov, G.
IGEM RAS (Russian Federation)


P2.04
An Automated Classification of Mawrth Vallis
Koenders, R.1; Lindenbergh, R.C.1; Zegers, T.E.2
1Delft University of Technology (Netherlands); 2Utrecht University (Netherlands)


P2.05
An Impact Crater Detection Tool (ICDY) Applied to Martian and Terrestrial Digital Elevation Models
Krøgli, S.O.1; Dypvik, H.2; Chicarro, A.3; Rossi, A.P.4; Etzelmüller, B.2
1University of Oslo (Norway); 2Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo (Norway); 3ESA/ESTEC, Solar System Missions Division (Netherlands); 4International Space Science Institute (ISSI) (Switzerland)

P2.06
Potential Implications of a Common Origin for Outflow Systems on Venus, Mars, and the Moon
Leverington, D.
Texas Tech University (United States)


P2.07
Sub-Surface Melting in Ice on Mars
Möhlmann, D.
DLR (Germany)


P2.08
Radar Subsurface Sounding over the Putative Frozen Sea in Cerberus Palus, Mars
Orosei, R.1; Cartacci, M.2; Cicchetti, A.2; Federico, C.3; Flamini, E.4; Frigeri, A.3; Holt, J.W.5; Marinangeli, L.6; Noschese, R.1; Pettinelli, E.7; Phillips, R.J.8; Picardi, G.2; Plaut, J.J.9; Safaeinili, A.9; Seu, R.2
1Istituto di Fisica dello Spazio Interplanetario, Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica (Italy); 2Dipartimento INFOCOM, Università di Roma "La Sapienza" (Italy); 3Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Perugia (Italy); 4Agenzia Spaziale Italiana (Italy); 5Institute for Geophysics, University of Texas at Austin (United States); 6International Research School of Planetary Sciences, Università degli Studi "Gabriele d'Annunzio" (Italy); 7Dipartimento di Fisica "E. Amaldi", Università Roma Tre (Italy); 8Southwest Research Institute, Boulder (United States); 9Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (United States)


P2.09
EuroGeoMars Geological Observations and GPR Measurements
Peters, S.T.M.1,6*; Borst, A.1,6*; Foing, B.H.1,*; Stoker, C.2,*; Kim, S.9; Wendt, L.8,*; Gross, C.8,*; Zhavaleta, J.2,*; Sarrazin, P.2,*; Blake, D.2; Ehrenfreund, P.10; Boche-Sauvan, L.1,*; Page, J.1,4; McKay, C.2; Batenburg, P.1,3,*; Drijkoningen, G.3; Slob, E.3; Poulakis, P.4; Visentin, G.4; Noroozi, A.3; Gill, E.3; Guglielmi, M.4; Freire, M.4; Walker, R.7; Sabbatini, M.5; Pletser, V.5,*; Monaghan, E.1,*; Ernst, R.1,*; Oosthoek, J.1; Mahapatra, P.1,*; Wills, D.1,*; Thiel, C.*; Petrova, D.*; Lebreton, J.P.1; Zegers, T.1; Chicarro, A.1; Koschny, D.1; Vago, J.1; Svedhem, H.1; Davies, G.6; Westenberg, A.11; Edwards, J.11; ExoGeoLab team1,4; EuroGeoMars team1,4,5
1ESTEC/SRE-S (Netherlands); 2NASA Ames (Netherlands); 3Delft TU Aerospace/ Geology and Civil Engineering (Netherlands); 4ESTEC TEC Technology Dir. (Netherlands); 5ESTEC HSF Human Spaceflight (Netherlands); 6VU Amsterdam (Netherlands); 7ESTEC Education Office (Netherlands); 8FU Berlin (Germany); 9JPL (Netherlands); 10Leiden/GWU (Netherlands); 11Mars society; *EuroGeoMars crew


P2.10
Image Analysis: Tools for the Recognition and Characterization of Planetary Surface Features
Saraiva, J.1; Pina, P.2; Bandeira, L.2; Lira, C.2; Benavente, N.2; Barata, T.3
1IST (Portugal); 2CERENA / IST (Portugal); 3CG / UCoimbra (Portugal)


P2.11
Polygonal Patterns on Mars and Earth: Automated Characterization as a Basis for Comparison
Saraiva, J.; Pina, P.; Bandeira, L.; Benavente, N.
CERENA / IST (Portugal)


P2.12
Mars Planetary Mapping Pilot Project
Tragheim, D.G.1; Marsh, S.H.1; Pedley, R.C.1; Gunnink, J.L.2; Oosthoek, J.H.P.2; Muller, J.P.3; van Ruitenbeek, F.J.A.4
1British Geological Survey (United Kingdom); 2TNO/Deltares (Netherlands); 3Mullard Space Science Laboratory, University College London (United Kingdom); 4ITC (Netherlands)


P2.13
Some Features of the Earth, Venus and Mars Global Relief
Lazarev, E.N.; Rodionova, J.F.
Sternberg State Astronomical Institute (Russian Federation)


P2.14
Methane as a Possible Inhibitor of Subsurface Oxidation by Atmospheric Hydrogen Peroxide at Mars
Chassefiere, E.
LATMOS (France)


P2.15
Emissivity Measurements of Martian and Venusian Analogue Minerals
Maturilli, A.1; Helbert, J.2
1DLR - German Aerospace Center (Germany); 2DLR - Institute of Planetary Research (Germany)


P2.16
Possible Surface Anomalies on the Northern Hemisphere of Venus as Observed by VIRTIS/VEX: First Analyses for Comparative Planetologic Studies
Arnold, G.1; Haus, R.2; Kappel, D.3; Basilevsky, A.4; Drossart, P.5; Piccioni, G.6
1WWU Muenster, Institut fuer Planetologie; DLR Berlin, Institut fuer Planetenforschung (Germany); 2Astrofeinwerk GmbH (Germany); 3Institut fuer Planetologie, WWU Muenster (Germany); 4Vernadski Institute, Moscow (Russian Federation); 5LESIA, Observatoire de Paris, CNRS (France); 6IASF, Rome (Italy)


P2.17
A Hydrothermal System on Mars; Detection and Geological Context
den Haan, J.1; Zegers, T.E.2; van Ruitenbeek, F.J.A.3; van der Werff, H.M.A.3; Rossi, A.4
1Utrecht University (Netherlands); 2Utrecht University, Faculty of Geosciences (Netherlands); 3Department of Earth Systems Analysis, International Institute of Geo-information Science and Earth (Netherlands); 4International Space Science Institute (ISSI) (Switzerland)


P2.18
Geochemistry of Utah Morrison Formation from EuroGeoMars Campaign
Borst, A.1,6*; Peters, S.1,6*; Foing, B.H.1*; Stoker, C.2*; Wendt, L.8*; Gross, C.8*; Zhavaleta, J.2*; Sarrazin, P.2*; Blake, D.2; Ehrenfreund, P.10; Boche-Sauvan, L.1*; Page, J.1,4; McKay, C.2; Batenburg, P.1,3*; Drijkoningen, G.3; Slob, E.3; Poulakis, P.4; Visentin, G.4; Noroozi, A.3; Gill, E.3; Guglielmi, M.4; Freire, M.4; Walker, R.7; Sabbatini, M.5; Pletser, V.5*; Monaghan, E.1*; Ernst, R.1; Oosthoek, J.1; Mahapatra, P.1; Wills, D.1*; Thiel, C.*; Lebreton, J.P.1; Zegers, T.1; Chicarro, A.1; Koschny, D.1; Vago, J.1; Svedhem, H.1; Davies, G.6; Westenberg, A.11; Edwards, J.11; ExoGeoLab team1,4 & EuroGeoMars team1,4,5
1ESTEC/SRE-S (Netherlands); 2NASA Ames (United States); 3Delft TU Aerospace/ Geology and Civil Engineering (Netherlands); 4ESTEC TEC Technology Dir. (Netherlands); 5ESTEC HSF Human Spaceflight (Netherlands); 6VU Amsterdam (Netherlands); 7ESTEC Education Office (Netherlands); 8FU Berlin (Germany); 10Leiden/GWU (Netherlands); 11Mars Society; *EuroGeoMars crew


P2.19
Geology and Geochemistry Highlights from EuroGeoMars MDRS Campaign
Foing, B.H.1*; Peters, S.1,6*; Borst, A.1,6*; Wendt, L.8*; Gross, C.8*; Stoker, C.2*; Zhavaleta, J.2*; Sarrazin, P.2*; Blake, D.2; Ehrenfreund, P.10; Boche-Sauvan, L.1*; Page, J.1,4; McKay, C.2 ; Batenburg, P.1,3*; Drijkoningen, G.3; Slob, E.3; Poulakis, P.4; Visentin, G.4; Noroozi, A.3; Gill, E.3; Guglielmi, M.4; Freire, M.4; Walker, R.7; Pletser, V.5*; Monaghan, E.1*; Ernst, R.1*; Oosthoek, J.1; Mahapatra, P.1*; Wills, D.1*; Thiel, C.*; Lebreton, J.P.1; Zegers, T.1; Chicarro, A.1; Koschny, D.1; Vago, J.1; Svedhem, H.1; Davies, G.6; Westenberg, A.11; Edwards, J.11; ExoGeoLab team1,4 & EuroGeoMars team1,4,5
1ESTEC/SRE-S (Netherlands); 2NASA Ames (United States); 3Delft TU Aerospace/ Geology and Civil Engineering (Netherlands); 4ESTEC TEC Technology Dir. (Netherlands); 5ESTEC HSF Human Spaceflight (Netherlands); 6VU Amsterdam (Netherlands); 7ESTEC Education Office (Netherlands); 8FU Berlin (Germany); 10Leiden/GWU (Netherlands); 11Mars society, *EuroGeoMars crew


Session 3 - Conditions for Life

P3.01
On the Possible Transfer of Microorganisms from Venus to Earth
Wickramasinghe, N.C.; Wickramasinghe, J.T.
Centre for Astrobiology, Cardiff University (United Kingdom)


P3.02
Glaciopanspermia: Seeding the Terrestrial Planets with Life?
Houtkooper, J.
Justus-Liebig-University (Germany)


Session 5 - Climate and Atmospheric Dynamics

P5.01
Thermospheric Modeling of Mars and Venus
González-Galindo, F.1; Forget, F.1; Lebonnois, S.1; López-Valverde, M.A.2
1Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, CNRS (France); 2Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía, CSIC (Spain)


P5.02
Thermal Structures of Venus and Mars Atmospheres as Observed by Virtis Instruments
Grassi, D.1; Coradini, A.1; Drossart, P.2; Migliorini, A.3; Piccioni, G.3
1IFSI-INAF (Italy); 2Obs. de Paris-Meudon, LESIA (France); 3IASF-INAF (Italy)


P5.03
Wave-mean Flow Interactions and Gravity Waves in the Atmospheres of Mars and Earth
Medvedev, A.; Hartogh, P.; Kuroda, T.
Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany)


P5.04
Equatorial Semiannual Oscillations in the Atmospheres of Mars and Earth
Kuroda, T.1; Medvedev, A.S.1; Hartogh, P.1; Takahashi, M.2
1Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany); 2Center for Climate System Research, University of Tokyo (Japan)


P5.05
Dynamics and Circulation of the Venus Atmosphere
Mendonca, J.M.1; Read, P.L.1; Lewis, S.R.2
1University of Oxford (United Kingdom); 2The Open University (United Kingdom)


P5.06
Coherent Structures in Planetary Polar Vortices: A Laboratory View
Montabone, L.1; Wordsworth, R.2; Aguiar, A.3; Jacoby, T.4; McClimans, T.5; Read, P.L.4; Wilson, C.4
1The Open University (United Kingdom); 2Universite Paris VI (France); 3Universidade de Lisboa (Portugal); 4University of Oxford (United Kingdom); 5SINTEF Fisheries and Aquaculture (Norway)


P5.07
Thermal Wind in the Atmospheres of Venus and the Other Planets
Piccialli, A.1; Titov, D.V.1; Migliorini, A.2; Tellmann, S.3; Grassi, D.4; Piccioni, G.2; Paetzold, M.5
1MPS, Katlenburg - Lindau (Germany); 2IASF/INAF, Rome (Italy); 3RIU-koeln university, Koeln (Germany); 4IFSI/INAF, Rome (Italy); 5RIU-Koeln university, Koeln (Germany)


P5.08
Transport Barrier in the Middle Latitudes of Venus
Titov, D.1,2; Markiewicz, W.J.2; Piccioni, G.3; Drossart, P.4
1Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany); 2MPS (Germany); 3INAF-IASF (Italy); 4LESIA, Observatoire de Paris (France)


P5.09
Mesospheric Temperature Measurements on Mars and Venus by Observations of Non-LTE Emission of CO2 using Infrared Heterodyne Spectroscopy
Kroetz, P.1; Sonnabend, G.1; Sornig, M.1; Stupar, D.1; Schieder, R.1; Lopez Valverde, M.A.2
1University of Cologne (Germany); 2Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (Spain)


P5.10
Interferometric Measurements of Venus Mesospheric Wind
Sagawa, H.1; Hartogh, P.1; Gurwell, M.A.2; Rengel, M.1; Moullet, A.2
1Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany); 2Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (United States)


P5.11
Latitudinal and Local Time Distribution of the O2 Infrared Nightglow and O Density in the Lower Thermosphere
Soret, L.1; Gerard, J.-C.1; Saglam, A.1; Piccioni, G.2; Drossart, P.3
1ULG-LPAP (Belgium); 2INAF-IASF (Italy); 3LESIA (France)


P5.12
Satellite-Derived Cloud Motion Winds in the Polar Regions of Earth and Mars
Santek, D.; Limaye, S.S.
University of Wisconsin (United States)


P5.13
Ultra-high Resolution Heterodyne Spectroscopy as a Tool to Study Atmospheric Dynamics of the Terrestrial Planets
Sonnabend, G.1; Sornig, M.2; Kroetz, P.2; Stupar, D.2; Schieder, R.2
1University of Cologne (Germany); 2I. Physikalisches Institut, University of Cologne (Germany)


P5.14
Ground-Based Wind Measurements at Venus Cloud Tops
Widemann, T.; Lellouch, E.
Obs. Paris-Meudon/LESIA (France)


P5.15
An High Resolution Mesoscale Model for Mars. Preliminary Results
Zinzi, A.1; Ferretti, R.1; Palomba, E.2; Visconti, G.1
1Università di L'Aquila (Italy); 2IFSI-INAF (Italy)


P5.16
Changes in the Martian Surface Composition Related to Water Cycle: Evidence for Atmospheric Wave Phenomena
Evdokimova, N.1; Rodin, A.A.1; Kuzmin, R.O.1; Fedorova, A.A.1; Maltagliati, L.2
1IKI (Russian Federation); 2MPIS (Germany)


P5.17
The Ultraviolet Nitric Oxide Emission in the Nightside Atmospheres of Venus and Mars
Cox, C.1; Gérard, J.-C.1; Bertaux, J.-L.2
1Université de Liège (Belgium); 2Service d'Aéronomie du CNRS (France)

Day 3 - Wednesday, 13 May 2009
Session 4
Atmospheric Chemistry and Clouds
Chairs: Crisp, Bézard
09:00
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Atmospheric Chemistry on Venus, Earth, and Mars: Main Features and Comparison
Krasnopolsky, V.A.
Department of Physics, Catholic University of America, Washington (United States)
09:30
Presentation
Observations of Night OH in the Mesosphere of Venus and Earth: A Comparative Planetology Perspective
Parkinson, C.1; Brecht, A.1; Bougher, S.1; Yung, Y.L.2
1University of Michigan (United States); 2California Institute of Technology (United States)
09:50
Presentation
Oxygen Airglow Emissions on Venus and Mars
Migliorini, A.1; Altieri, F.2; Zasova, L.3; Piccioni, G.1; Bellucci, G.2; Cardesín Moinelo, A.5; Drossart, P.6; D'Aversa, E.2; Carrozzo, F.G.2; Gondet, B.7; Bibring, J.-P.7
1IASF-INAF (Italy); 2IFSI-INAF Rome (Italy); 3IKI, Moscow (Russian Federation); 4ESAC-Madrid (Spain); 5LESIA-Observatoire de Paris (France); 6Instiute d'Asrtrophysique Spatial, Orsay (France)
10:10
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
Clouds in the Terrestrial Planets
Montmessin, F.
CNRS/UVSQ/IPSL (France)
10:40
Presentation
Mesospheric Clouds on Mars and on the Earth
Määttänen, A.1; Perot, K.1; Montmessin, F.1; Hauchecorne, A.1; Gondet, B.2; Scholten, F.3; Hoffmann, H.3; Hauber, E.3; Gonzalez-Galindo, F.4; Forget, F.4; Bibring, J.-P.2; Bertaux, J.-L.1
1LATMOS (France); 2Institut d'astrophysique Spatiale (France); 3German Aerospace Center (DLR) (Germany); 4Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique (France)
11:00
Coffee break
11:25
Phoenix Lidar Observations of Dust, Clouds, and Precipitation on Mars and Earth
Whiteway, J.1; Komguem, L.1; Dickinson, C.1; Cook, C.1; Duck, T.2; Taylor, P.1; Davy, R.1; Seabrook, J.1; Fisher, D.3; Carswell, A.4; Daly, M.5; Popovici, V.1; Daerden, F.6
1York University (Canada); 2Dalhousie University (Canada); 3Natural Resources Canada (Canada); 4Optech Inc. (Canada); 5MDA Space Missions (Canada); 6Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (Belgium)
11:45
Discussion
12:00
End of Session
Session 5
Climate and Atmospheric Dynamics
Chairs: Titov
12:00
Invited Tutorial
Dynamics and Circulation Regimes of the Terrestrial Planets: The Big Picture?
Read, P.
University of Oxford (United Kingdom)
12:40
Presentation
Modeling the Climate Systems of the Terrestrial Planets: Building Virtual Planets
Forget, F.1; Lebonnois, S.2; Hourdin, F.2; Millour, E.2; Madeleine, J-B.2; Wordsworth, R.2; Gonzalez-Galindo, F.2; Lefevre, F.3; Montmessin, F.3
1LMD, IPSL (France); 2LMD (France); 3Latmos (France)
13:00
Lunch break
14:00
Presentation
The Mechanism of Superrotation: Comparing Venus and Titan with General Circulation Models
Lebonnois, S.; Hourdin, F.
LMD/IPSL/Univ. Paris 6/CNRS (France)
14:20
Presentation
The Mesospheres of Earth and Mars
Hartogh, P.; Medvedev, A.S.; Sonnemann, G.R.
MPS (Germany)
14:40
Presentation
Climatological Comparisons between the Earth and Venus Upper Atmospheres
Keating, G.M.1; Bougher, S.W.2; Theriot, M.E.1
1The George Washington University (United States); 2University of Michigan (United States)
15:00
Presentation
Comparative Mesoscale Meteorology: the Case of Mars and the Earth
Spiga, A.1; Forget, F.2
1LMD [IPSL/UPMC] (France); 2LMD [CNRS/UPMC] (France)
15:20
Presentation
Atmospheric Angular Momentum variations of Earth, Mars and Venus
Dehant, V.1; Karatekin, O.1; de Viron, O.2; Lambert, S.3; Van Hoolst, T.1
1Royal Observatory of Belgium (Belgium); 2Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (France); 3Observatoire de Paris (France)
15:40
Coffee break
16:10
Presentation
The Venusian Vortex and its Possible Relatives
Piccioni, G.1; Drossart, P.2
1INAF (Italy); 2LESIA (France)
16:30
Presentation
Vortex Circulation on Venus
Limaye, S.
University of Wisconsin (United States)
16:50
Venus Lightning: Comparison with Terrestrial Lightning
Russell, C.T.1; Daniels, J.T.M.1; Zhang, T.L.2; Wei, H.Y.1
1University of California, Los Angeles (United States); 2Austrian Academy of Sciences (Austria)
17:10
Presentation
Glaciations on Mars: Response to Orbital Variations Inferred from Climate Modelling, and Comparison with Earth
Madeleine, J.-B.1; Forget, F.1; Head, J.W.2; Montmessin, F.3
1Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (France); 2Planetary Group, Brown University (United States); 3Service d’Aéronomie (France)
17:30
Discussion
18:00
End of Session
18:30
Bus to Boat/Dinner
19:00
Boat Departure
22:30
Bus Back to Hotels

Day 4 - Thursday, 14 May 2009
Session 6
Aeronomy and Solar Wind Interaction
Chairs: Nagy, Witasse
09:00
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
The Solar Wind Interaction with Venus, Earth, and Mars: A Tutorial
Cravens, T.
University of Kansas (United States)
09:40
Presentation
Solar Wind Interaction with Venus and Mars
Ma, Y.1; Nagy, A.F.2; Russell, C.T.1; Najib, D.3; Toth, G.3
1IGPP, UCLA (United States); 2University of Michigan (United States); 3AOSS, University of Michigan (United States)
10:00
Presentation
Do Magnetospheres Really Shield Planetary Atmospheres from Solar Wind Interaction-Related Erosion?
Luhmann, J.1; Strangeway, R.J.2; Russell, C.T.2
1University of California (United States); 2IGPP UCLA (United States)
10:20
Presentation
Venus, Earth, Mars: Comparative Ion Escape Rates
Barabash, S.
Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden)
10:40
Coffee break
11:10
Imaging the Atmospheric Escape from Venus, Earth and Mars
Brandt, P.1; Sotirelis, T.1; Bazell, D.1; Barabash, S.2; Roelof, E.C.1
1The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (United States); 2The Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden)
11:30
Presentation
Airglow and Aurora
Gerard, J.-C.
LPAP, Université de Liège (Belgium)
11:50
Presentation
Carbon Dioxide Non-Lte Emissions in the Upper Atmospheres of Mars, Venus and Earth from Virtis Observations
Drossart, P.1; Lopez-Valverde, M.A.2; Piccioni, G.3; Coradini, A.4; Capaccioni, F.3; Gilli, G.2; Lopez-Puertas, M.2; Erard, S.1
1Observatoire de Paris (France); 2CSIC, Granada (Spain); 3IASF-INAF, Rome (Italy); 4IFSI-INAF, Rome (Italy)
12:10
Presentation
Modelling the Atmospheric CO2 10-um Laser Emission at High Spectral Resolution in Mars and Venus
Lopez-Valverde, M.A.1; Sonnabend, G.2; Sornig, M.2; Kroetz, P.2
1Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia / CSIC (Spain); 2I. Physikalisches Institut, University of Cologne (Germany)
12:30
Presentation
Non-Lte Co Limb Emission at 4.7 Um in the Upper Atmosphere of Venus, Mars and Earth: Observations and Modelling
Gilli, G.1; Lopez-Valverde, M.A.1; Funke, B.1; Lopez-Puertas, M.1; Drossart, P.2; Piccioni, G.3
1Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia / CSIC (Spain); 2LESIA, Observatoire de Paris (France); 3IASF-INAF (Italy)
13:00
Lunch break
14:00
Presentation
Model Simulations of the Upper Atmospheres of Venus and Mars: Processes Regulating Solar Cycle Variability
Bougher, S.W.1; Brecht, A.1; McDunn, T.1; Bell, J.M.2
1University of Michigan (United States); 2Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) (United States)
14:20
Presentation
Exosphere Temperature Variability at Earth, Mars and Venus
Forbes, J.M.1; Bruinsma, S.L.2
1University of Colorado (United States); 2Centre Nationale D'Etudes Spatiales (France)
14:40
Presentation
Radiative Transfer of the Oxygen 130 nm Triplet in the Atmosphere of Mars and Venus
Barthelemy, M.1; Gronoff, G.1; Lilensten, J.1; Chaufray, J.-Y.2; Simon, C.3
1Laboratoire de Planetologie de Grenoble (France); 2Southwest Research Institute (United States); 3Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (BISA) (Belgium)
15:00
Presentation
Comparative Aeronomy: Ionospheric Production for Terrestrial Planets
Mendillo, M.; Lombardi, R.; Matta, M.; Martinis, C.; Moore, L.; Withers, P.
Center for Space Physics, Boston University (United States)
15:20
Presentation
Ion Transport in the Upper Ionospheres of Mars and Venus
Fränz, M.1; Dubinin, E.1; Nielsen, E.1; Angsmann, A.1; Woch, J.1; Barabash, S.2; Lundin, R.2; Fedorov, A.3
1MPI fuer Sonnensystemforschung (Germany); 2Institutet Foer Rymdfysik (Sweden); 3CESR (France)
15:40
Coffee break
16:10
Presentation
Ionospheric Photoelectrons: Comparing Earth, Venus, Mars and Titan
Coates, A.J.1,2; Tsang, S.M.E.1,2; Wellbrock, A.1,2; Frahm, R.A.3; Winningham, J.D.3; Barabash, S.4; Lundin, R.4; Young, D.T.3; Crary, F.3
1Mullard Space Science Laboratory, University College London (United Kingdom); 2Centre for Planetary Sciences at UCL/Birkbeck (United Kingdom); 3Southwest Research Institute (United States); 4Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden)
16:30
Presentation
Observations of the Effects of Meteors on the Ionospheres of Venus, Earth and Mars
Withers, P.1; Christou, A.A.2; Mendillo, M.1; Paetzold, M.3; Peter, K.3; Tellmann, S.3; Vaubaillon, J.4
1Boston University (United States); 2Armagh Observatory (United Kingdom); 3Rhenish Institute for Environmental Research (Germany); 4IMCCE (France)
16:50
Comparative Study of the Ion Cyclotron Waves at Mars, Venus and Earth
Russell, C.T.1; Wei, H.Y.1; Zhang, T.L.2; Blanco-Cano, X.3
1University of California Los Angeles (United States); 2Space Research Institute (Austria); 3Institute of Geophysics, UNAM (Mexico)
17:10
Presentation
Comparative Automated Multi-Dataset Analysis of the Martian and Venusian Time-Variable Plasma Environments
André, N.1; Jacquey, C.1; Fedorov, A.2; Budnik, E.3; Génot, V.1; Ferrier, C.2; Mazelle, C.2; Cecconi, B.4; Penou, E.2; Zhang, T.L.5; Rucker, H.5; Khodachenko, M.5; Lammer, H.5; Volwerk, M.5; Nakamura, R.5; Topf, F.5; Sauvaud, J.-A.2; Barabash, S.6; Lundin, R.6
1CDPP/CESR, CNRS/Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse (France); 2CESR, CNRS/Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse (France); 3Noveltis, Ramonville Saint Agne (France); 4LESIA, Observatoire Paris-Meudon, Meudon (France); 5Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Graz (Austria); 6Swedish Institute for Space Physics, Kiruna (Sweden)
17:30
Discussion
18:00
Poster Sessions
19:45
Bus Departure to Hotels
 
Poster Sessions
 

Session 4 - Atmospheric Chemistry and Clouds

P4.01
The Origin of Methane in Martian Atmosphere: The Hypothesis of Metastable Methane Clathrate Particles
Chassefiere, E.
LATMOS (France)


P4.02
H2O and H2O2 Mapping on Mars near Summer Solstice: Further Evidence for Heterogeneous Chemistry
Encrenaz, T.1; Greathouse, T.K.2; Bitner, M.A.2; Kruger, A.J.3; Richter, M.J.3; Lacy, J.H.4; Bézard, B.5; Fouchet, T.5; Lefèvre, F.6; Forget, F.7; Atreya, S.K.8
1Paris Observatory (France); 2SwRI, San Antonio (United States); 3University of California Davis (United States); 4University of Texas at Austin (United States); 5LESIA, Paris Observatory (France); 6LATMOS, CNRS, Paris (France); 7LMD, CNRS, Paris (France); 8University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (United States)


P4.03
Quantifying Photochemical Catalytic Cycles Near the Martian Atmospheric Surface
Grenfell, J.L.1; Stock, J.2; Lehmann, R.3; Rauer, H.2
1Technische Universität Berlin (Germany); 2Institut für Planetenforschung, DLR Berlin (Germany); 3Alfred-Wegener-Institut für Polar- und Meeresforschung (Germany)


P4.04
Hydroxyl Detection on Venus and Earth, and Implications for Ozone
Migliorini, A.1; Piccioni, G.1; Cardesín Moinelo, A.2; Gérard, J.-C.3; Drossart, P.4
1IASF-INAF, Rome (Italy); 2ESAC-Madrid (Spain); 3LPAP, Univ. de Liège (Belgium); 4LESIA-Observatoire de Paris (France)


P4.05
Comparison of O2 IR and NO UV Night Airglow Variations on Mars and Venus
Brecht, A.1; Bougher, S.W.1; Gerard, J.C.2; Rafkin, S.3; Foster, B.4
1University of Michigan (United States); 2University of Liege (Belgium); 3Southwest Research Institute (United States); 4High Altitude Observatory (United States)


P4.06
Sensitivity Study of Water Vapor Total Column Measurements Using Elodie Archive at Observatoire De Haute-Provence from 1994 To 2004
Alkasm, S.; Sarkissian, A.
LATMOS (France)


P4.07
Effects of Different Atmospheric Dust Loading on the Retrieval of Surface Albedo of Mars
Zinzi, A.1; Palomba, E.2; Rinaldi, G.2; D'Amore, M.3
1Università di L'Aquila (Italy); 2IFSI-INAF (Italy); 3DLR-PF (Germany)


P4.08
Sulfuric Acid in the Clouds of Terrestrial Planets
McGouldrick, K.1; Toon, O.B.2; Grinspoon, D.H.1
1Denver Museum of Nature & Science (United States); 2University of Colorado (United States)


P4.09
Updating CO2 Spectroscopic Line List using Mars and Venus Spectra
Vandaele, A.C.1; Villanueva, G.2; Bertaux, J.-L.3; Borkov, Y.4; Drummond, R.5; Mahieux, A.5; Montmessin, F.3; Mumma, M.2; Novak, R.6; Perevalov, V.4; Tashkun, S.4; Wilquet, V.5
1Inst for Space Aeronomy (Belgium); 2NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (United States); 3LATMOS (France); 4Laboratory of Theoretical Spectroscopy, Institute of Atmospheric Optics (Russian Federation); 5Planetary Aeronomy, Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (Belgium); 6Iona College (United States)


Session 6 - Aeronomy and Solar Wind Interaction

P6.01
Solar Wind Parameters Throughout the Heliosphere from Multi-Spacecraft Measurements
Fedorov, A.1; Opitz, A.1; Wurz, P.2; Szego, K.3; Sauvaud, J-A.1; Luhmann, J.4; Galvin, A.B.5; Barabash, S.6
1CESR (CNRS-UPS) (France); 2Physics Institute, University of Bern (Switzerland); 3KFKI, Research Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics (Hungary); 4SSL, University of Berkeley (United States); 5SSC, University of New Hampshire (United States); 6IRF, Kiruna (Sweden)


P6.02
Comparative Investigation of the Terrestrial and Venusian Interface with the Shocked Solar Wind: Kinetic Modeling and Observations by Cluster and Venus Express
Echim, M.1; Maggiolo, R.1; Voitcu, G.2; Zhang, T.L.3; Lundin, R.4
1Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (Belgium); 2Institute for Space Sciences Bucharest (Romania); 3Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Graz (Austria); 4Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Kiruna (Sweden)


P6.03
Intercomparison of Global Models and Measurements of the Martian Plasma Environment
Holmstrom, M.1; Brain, D.2; Bougher, S.3; Brecht, S.4; Boesswetter, A.5; Chanteur, G.6; Dubinin, E.7; Duru, F.8; Fang, X.9; Fedorov, A.10; Fraenz, M.7; Halekas, J.2; Harnett, E.11; Jarvinen, R.12; Kallio, E.12; Ledvina, S.4; Liemohn, M.3; Ma, Y.13; Modolo, R.14; Nagy, A.3; Najib, D.3; Nilsson, H.1; Simon, S.15; Terada, N.16; Walker, R.13
1Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden); 2UC Berkeley (United States); 3University of Michigan (United States); 4Bay Area Research Corporation (United States); 5ITP Braunschweig (Germany); 6CETP (France); 7Max Planck Institute, Katlenburg-Lindau (Germany); 8University of Iowa (United States); 9University of Colorado (United States); 10CESR (France); 11University of Washington (United States); 12Finnish Meteorological Institute (Finland); 13UCLA (United States); 14University of Versailles (France); 15University of Cologne (Germany); 16NICT (Japan)


P6.04
The Atmospheric Origin of Cold Ion Escape from Mars
Lundin, R.; Barabash, S.; Holmstrom, M.; Nilsson, H.; Yamauchi, M.
Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden)


P6.05
Comparative Investigatons of Planetary Electromagnetic Environments
Ferencz, Cs.; Lichtenberger, J.
Eotvos University (Hungary)


P6.06
Particle Circulation Model in the Martian/Venus Environment: Atmospheric Sputtering
Rinaldi, G.1; Mura, A.2; Mangano, V.2; Milillo, A.2; Orsini, S.2
1INAF (Italy); 2IFSI-INAF (Italy)


P6.07
Hot Hydrogen Ion Precipitation in the Martian Ionosphere in the Vicinity of Strong Crustal Magnetic Field Anomalies and a Comparison with Earth and Venus Conditions
Parkinson, C.1; Liemohn, M.1; Fang, X.2
1University of Michigan (United States); 2University of Colorado (United States)


P6.08
Hot Oxygen Atoms in Venus Exosphere
Groeller, H.1; Lichtenegger, H.I.M.1; Lammer, H.1; Kulikov, Yu.N.2; Shematovich, V.I.3
1Space Research Institute (Austria); 2Polar Geophysical Institute (Russian Federation); 3Institute of Astronomy (Russian Federation)


P6.09
Modelling Non-LTE Emissions by CO2 at 4.3-um in the Upper Atmospheres of the Terrestrial Planets
Lopez-Valverde, M.1; Lopez-Puertas, M.1; Funke, B.1; Gilli, G.1; Garcia-Comas, M.1; Drossart, P.2; Piccioni, G.3
1Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia / CSIC (Spain); 2LESIA, Observatoire de Paris (France); 3IASF-INAF (Italy)


P6.10
Some Aspects of Venus, Earth and Mars Upper Atmosphere Superrotation
Bespalov, P.1; Savina, O.N.2
1Institute of Applied Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences (Russian Federation); 2State Technical University (Russian Federation)


P6.11
Energy Per Ion Pair In Planetary Upper Atmospheres
Simon, C.1; Lilensten, J.2; Gronoff, G.2; Menager, H.2; Barthelemy, M.2
1Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (Belgium); 2Laboratoire de Planetologie de Grenoble (France)


P6.12
Ionospheric Photoelectrons at Venus - A Preliminary Statistical Review
Tsang, S.1; Coates, A.J.1; Jones, G.H.1; Frahm, R.A.2; Winningham, J.D.2; Fedorov, A.3; Barabash, S.4; Lundin, R.4
1Mullard Space Science Laboratory, University College London (United Kingdom); 2Southwest Research Institute (United States); 3Centre d'Etude Spatiale des Rayonnement (France); 4Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden)


P6.13
Mars and Venus: An Observed Interaction Region Near the Top of the Ionosphere
Winningham, J.D.1; Coates, A.J.2; Lundin, R.3; Duru, F.4; Gurnett, D.A.4; Sharber, J.R.1; Frahm, R.A.1; Tsang, S.M.E.2; Delva, M.5; Zhang, T.L.5
1Southwest Research Institute (United States); 2Mullard Space Science Laboratory, University College London (United Kingdom); 3Swedish Institute of Space Physics (Sweden); 4University of Iowa (United States); 5Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Science (Austria)


P6.14
Permanent Layer in the Venus Lower Ionosphere
Gavrik, A.; Gavrik, Yu.A.; Samoznaev, L.N.; Kopnina, T.F.
Kotel'nikov Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics of RAS (Russian Federation)


P6.15
How to Derive Neutral Density Profiles from Electron Density Measurements
Witasse, O.1; Blelly, P.-L.2; Patzold, M.3; Tellmann, S.3; Hausler, B.4; Vandaele, A.-C.5; Wilquet, V.5; Mahieux, A.5; Drummond, R.5; Villard, E.6; Montmessin, F.7; Bertaux, J.-L.7
1European Space Agency (Netherlands); 2CESR (France); 3Cologne University (Germany); 4Munchen University (Germany); 5BIRA (Belgium); 6LATMOS (France); 7LATMOS (Belgium)


P6.16
Structure and Dynamics of the Ionopause of Venus
Angsmann, A.1; Dubinin, E.1; Fränz, M.1; Martinecz, C.1; Woch, J.1; Barabash, S.2; Pätzold, M.3; Zhang, T.L.4
1MPI for Solar System Research (Germany); 2IRF, Kiruna (Sweden); 3Rheinisches Institut für Umweltforschung (Germany); 4Institut für Weltraumforschung, Graz (Austria)


P6.17
The High Latitude Ionospheres of Venus and Earth at Solar Minimum
Wood, A.; Grande, M.; Pryse, S.E.; Kidd, P.; Whittaker, I.C.; Fallows, R.A.
Aberystwyth University (United Kingdom)


P6.18
An Interoperable Web-based Service Offered Through the EuroPlaNet/IDIS Plasma Node Usable for Planetary Plasma Data Exploitation and Comparative Studies: Application to the Martian and Venusian Environments
André, N.1; Topf, F.2; Budnik, E.3; Gangloff, M.1; Hitier, R.4; Pallier, E.5; Zhang, T.L.2; Fedorov, A.5; Jacquey, C.1; Rucker, H.2; Génot, V.1; Cecconi, B.6; Khodachenko, M.2; Mazelle, C.5; Penou, E.5; Sauvaud, J.-A.5; Barabash, S.7; Lundin, R.7
1CDPP/CESR, CNRS/Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse (France); 2Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Graz (Austria); 3Noveltis, Ramonville Saint Agne (France); 4Co-Libri, Montreal (France); 5CESR, CNRS/Universite Paul Sabatier, Toulouse (France); 6LESIA, Observatoire Paris-Meudon, Meudon (France); 7Swedish Institute for Space Physics, Kiruna (Sweden)


Session 7 - Evolution

P7.01
The History of Water on Venus: a Scenario Accounting for Present Neon and Hydrogen Isotopic Ratios
Gillmann, C.1; Chassefiere, E.2; Lognonne, P.1
1IPGP (France); 2LATMOS/IPSL (France)


P7.02
How was the Present-Day Martian Atmosphere Formed?
Gillmann, C.1; Lognonne, P.1; Chassefiere, E.2; Leblanc, F.2
1IPGP (France); 2LATMOS/IPSL (France)


P7.03
Mantle Degassing and Atmospheric Evolution: An Application to Mars and Venus
Morschhauser, A.; Grott, M.; Breuer, D.
Institute of Planetary Research, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Berlin (Germany)


P7.04
Investigation of Extreme Solar Events Based on Accelerometer Data from Leo Satellites
Krauss, S.1; Hausleitner, W.2
1Austrian Academy of Sciences (Austria); 2Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences (Austria)


Session 8 - Future Missions

P8.01
Mission Architecture Trades for an ASRG-Enabled Discovery-Class Balloon Mission
Balint, T.; Baines, K.H.; Nuclear Polar VALOR Study Team
Jet Propulsion Laboratory / California Institute of Technology (United States)


P8.02
Future Radioscience Missions with Landers and Orbiters to Mars and other Terestrial Bodies
Dehant, V.1; Mitrovic, M.1; Le Maistre, S.1; Yseboodt, M.1; Rosenblatt, P.1; Van Hoolst, T.1; Chicarro, A.2
1Royal Observatory of Belgium (Belgium); 2ESA/ESTEC (Netherlands)


P.8.03
The SOIR Instrument - Results from Venus and Possibilities for Mars
Drummond, R.1; Vandaele, A-C.1; Daerden, F.1; Neefs, E.1; Mahieux, A.1; Wilquet, V.1; Montmessin, F.2; Bertaux, J-L.2
1Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy (Belgium); 2Service d'Aeronomie (France)


P8.04
Advanced Mössbauer Spectrometer MIMOS II for ExoMars and other Missions
Klingelhöfer, G.1; Blumers, M.1; Bernhardt, B.2; Lechner, P.3,4; Girones Lopez, J.1; Maul, J.1; Strüder, L.4,5; dUston, C.6; Brückner, J.7; Henkel, H.2
1University Mainz (Germany); 2Von Hoerner&Sulger GmbH (Germany); 3PNSensor, München (Germany); 4MPI Halbleiterlabor, München (Germany); 5MPI für Extraterrestrische Physik, Garching (Germany); 6CESR, Toulouse (France); 7MPI Chemie, Mainz (Germany)


P8.05
Raman Spectroscopy for Mineral and Organic Analysis on Mars within the ExoMars Mission
Rull, F.
Centro de Astrobiología (Spain)


P8.06
The Venus Exploration Analysis Group (VEXAG): Priorities for Future Venus Exploration
Stofan, E.1; Allen, M.2; Baines, K.2; Balint, T.2; Bullock, M.3; Cutts, J.2; Glaze, L.4; Grinspoon, D.5; Mackwell, S.6; Thompson, T.2
1Proxemy Research/UCL (United States); 2Jet Propulsion Laboratory (United States); 3Southwest Research Institute (United States); 4Goddard Space Flight Center (United States); 5Denver Museum of Nature and Science (United States); 6Lunar and Planetary Institute (United States)


P8.07
Upcoming Science Activities in Support of ESA's ExoMars Mission
Vago, J.L.; Haldemann, A.F.C.; the ExoMars Project Team
European Space Agency (Netherlands)


P8.08
The Cyborg Astrobiologist: Teaching Computers to Find Uncommon or Novel Areas of Geological Scenery in Real-time
Wendt, L.1,9; Gross, C.1; McGuire, P.C.1,2,3; Bonnici, A.4; Foing, B.H.5; Souza-Egipsy, V.2,6; Bose, R.3; Walter, S.1; Ormö, J.2; Díaz-Martínez, E.2,7; Oesker, M.8; Ontrup, J.8; Haschke, R.8; Ritter, H.8
1Freie Univ. Berlin, Germany, 2Centro de Astrobiología (INTA/CSIC), Torrejón de Ardoz, Madrid, Spain, 3Mc-Donnell Center for the Space Sciences, Washington Univ., St. Louis, USA, 4Dept. Systems and Control Engineering, Univ. Malta, 5ESTEC, Noordwijk, Netherlands, 6Univ. Málaga, Spain, 7Geological Survey of Spain (IGME), Madrid, Spain, 8Technische Fakultät, Univ. Bielefeld, Germany


P8.09
Venera D - Russian Mission to Venus
Korablev, O.I.1; Vorontsov, V.A.2; Zasova, L.V.1; Basilevsky, A.T.3; Ekonomov, A.P.1; Ignatiev, N.I.1; Khavroshkin, O.B.4; Lipatov, A.N.1; Moshkin, B.E.1
1IKI RAS, Moscow (Russian Federation); 2Lavochkin Ass., Moscow (Russian Federation); 3GEOKHI, RAS, Moscow (Russian Federation); 4IFZ RAS, Moscow (Russian Federation)

Day 5 - Friday, 15 May 2009
Session 7
Evolution
Chairs: Grinspoon, Lammer
09:00
Invited Tutorial
Presentation
The Divergent Evolution of Venus, Earth and Mars
Grinspoon, D.
Denver Museum of Nature & Science (United States)
09:40
Presentation
Aspects of the evolution of the atmosphere of Mars and Venus
Gillmann, C.
IPGP (France)
10:00
Presentation
Early Evolution of Mars and the Earth: A Reappraisal
Bibring, J.-P.; Poulet, F.
IAS (France)
10:20
Presentation
The Abundances and Isotopic Ratios of Noble and Light Gases: Clues to the Origin and Evolution of Venus, Earth, and Mars
Baines, K.1; Atreya, S.K.2; Grinspoon, D.3; Zahnle, K.4
1Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (United States); 2University of Michigan (United States); 3Denver Museum of Nature and Science (United States); 4NASA/Ames Research Center (United States)
10:40
Coffee break
11:10
Presentation
Earth, Venus and Mars were Developed on the Same Scenario: Evidence from Geological and Petrological Data
Sharkov, E.; Bogatikov, O.
Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy and Geochemistry RAS (Russian Federation)
11:30
Presentation
The Stability of Early Earth’s Nitrogen Atmosphere
Lichtenegger, H.1; Lammer, H.1; Khodachenko, M.L.1; Kulikov, Yu.N.2; Groeller, H.1; Griessmeier, J.M.3
1Space Research Institute (Austria); 2Polar Geophysical Institute (Russian Federation); 3ASTRON (Netherlands)
11:50
Presentation
The Hydrogen Corona of Earth, Venus and Mars, and Possible Implication for Atmospheric Evolution
Bertaux, J.-L.1; Chaufray, J.Y.2; Quémerais, E.1
1LATMOS/CNRS (France); 2South West Research Institute (United States)
12:10
Presentation
Escape of Heavy Hot Atoms from Early Mars
Groeller, H.1; Lammer, H.1; Lichtenegger, H.I.M.1; Shematovich, V.I.2; Kulikov, Yu.N.3
1Space Research Institute (Austria); 2Institute of Astronomy (Russian Federation); 3Polar Geophysical Institute (Russian Federation)
12:30
Discussion
13:00
End of Session
13:00
Lunch break
Session 8
Future Missions
Chairs: Chicarro, Satoh
14:00
Presentation
JAXA’s Planetary Exploration Activities: Current and Near Future
Nakamura, M. Satoh, T.
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (Japan)
14:20
Presentation
NASA's Planetary Science
Budney, C.
Jet Propulsion Laboratory/California Institute of Technology (United States)
14:40
Presentation
Overview of NASA's Flagship Class Venus Mission Study
Balint, T.1; Benz, A.C.1; Bullock, M.A.2; Senske, D.A.1; Campbell, B.A.3; Chassefiere, E.4; Colaprete, A.5; Cutts, J.A.1; Glaze, L.6; Gorevan, S.7; Grinspoon, D.H.8; Hall, J.L.1; Hashimoto, G.L.9; Head, J.W.10; Hunter, J.11; Johnson, N.12; Kerzhanovich, V.V.1; Kiefer, W.S.13; Kolawa, E.A.1; Kremic, T.6; Kwok, J.H.1; Limaye, S.S.14; Mackwell, S.J.13; Marov, M.Y.15; Ocampo, A.C.16; Peterson, C.E.1; Schubert, J.17; Spilker, T.1; Stofan, E.R.18; Svedhem, H.19; Titov, D.V.20; Treiman, A.H.13
1Jet Propulsion Laboratory / California Institute of Technology (United States); 2Southwest Research Institute (United States); 3Smithsonian Institution (United States); 4Service d’Aeronomie (France); 55NASA / Ames Research Center (United States); 6NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center (United States); 7Honeybee Robotics (United States); 8Denver Museum of Nature and Science (United States); 9Kobe University (Japan); 10Brown University (United States); 11NASA / Glenn Research Center (United States); 12NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center (United States); 13Lunar and Planetary Institute (United States); 14University of Wisconsin, Madison (United States); 15Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics (Russian Federation); 16NASA HQ (United States); 17University of California at Los Angeles (United States); 18Proxemy Research (United States); 19ESA, Noordwijk (Netherlands); 20Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (Germany)
15:00
Presentation
Russian Plans for Mars and Venus
Korablev, O.
15:20
Presentation
The ESA Exploration Programme - Programmatics
Coradini, M.
ESA HQ (France)
15:40
Coffee break
16:10
Presentation
The ESA exploration programme - Science Rationale
Chicarro, A.
ESA-ESTEC (Netherlands)
16:30
Presentation
The European Venus Explorer: A Mission for Better Understanding the Climate Evolution of Terrestrial Planets
Chassefière, E.; the EVE Team
LATMOS-IPSL/ UVSQ-CNRS-UPMC, Université P & M Curie (France)
16:50
Discussion
17:00
Presentation
Meeting Summary and Concluding Remarks
Saunders, S.
NASA (United States)
17:30
End of Conference
17:45
Bus to Schiphol
  Copyright 2000 - 2008 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.