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Campbell et al. 1992
Campbell, D.B., Stacy, N.J.S., Newman, W.I., Arvidson, R.E., Jones, E.M., Musser, G.S., Roper, A.Y. and Schaller, C. (1992). Magellan Observations of Extended Impact Crater Related Features on the Surface of Venus. Journal of Geophysical Research 97: doi: 10.1029/92JE01634. issn: 0148-0227.

A total of 57 parabolic-shaped and 9 approximately circular extended, impact crater related features have been found in Magellan synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and thermal emissivity data covering 92% of the surface of Venus. The parabolic features are, with seven exceptions. oriented E--W with the apex to the east and the impact crater located just west of the apex. They were first identified in the surface emissivity data derived from Magellan radiometry measurements, but the great majority are only clearly visible in the SAR imagery. The overall sizes of both the parabolic and circular features range from several hundred to about two thousand kilometers and are loosely correlated with the diameters of the ''parent'' craters. The floors of almost all these craters have high specific radar backscatter cross sections (i.e., they are bright in the SAR imagery) relative to their surroundings and tend to have low emissivities. Approximately one-third of the impact craters with diameters ≥15 km appear to have bright floors and about half of these have an associated parabolic feature which can be observed in the SAR or emissivity data. No features have been found which overlie the parabolic features, indicating that they are among the youngest features on the surface of the planet. This suggests that radar-bright floors characterize the freshest impact craters and that modification processes subsequently darken their radar signature.

A model for the formation of the parabolic features is developed based on the injection of small particles into the upper atmosphere at the time of impact and their transport to the west by the E--W zonal winds. Fitting of a small perturbation scattering model to the measured average scattering law for the parabolic features placed an upper limit of about 0.6 cm on the wavelength scale (12.6 cm) surface roughness and, hence, of 1 to 2 cm on the largest particle sizes of interest. Fallout times from 50 km in the Venus atmosphere for particles of this size are about 2 hours, allowing westerly drifts of several hundred kilometers for zonal winds of 50 to 100 m s-1. Measurements of the change in backscatter cross section of features overlaid by these extended ejecta deposits, are consistent with deposit depths of a few centimeters to 1 or 2 m. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1992

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Planetology, Solid Surface Planets, Impact phenomena (includes cratering), Planetology, Solid Surface Planets, Surface materials and properties, Radio Science, Remote sensing, Radio Science, Radar astronomy
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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