Publications by authors named "Jason Reimuller"

The Polar Mesospheric Cloud Turbulence (PMC Turbo) instrument consists of a balloon-borne platform which hosts seven cameras and a Rayleigh lidar. During a 6-day flight in July 2018, the cameras captured images of Polar Mesospheric Clouds (PMCs) with a sensitivity to spatial scales from ~20 m to 100 km at a ~2-s cadence and a full field of view (FOV) of hundreds of kilometers. We developed software optimized for imaging of PMCs, controlling multiple independent cameras, compressing and storing images, and for choosing telemetry communication channels.

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Two successive mesospheric bores were observed over northeastern Canada on 13 July 2018 in high-resolution imaging and Rayleigh lidar profiling of polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs) performed aboard the PMC Turbo long-duration balloon experiment. Four wide field-of-view cameras spanning an area of ~75 × 150 km at PMC altitudes captured the two evolutions occurring over ~2 hr and resolved bore and associated instability features as small as ~100 m. The Rayleigh lidar provided PMC backscatter profiling that revealed vertical displacements, evolving brightness distributions, evidence of instability character and depths, and insights into bore formation, ducting, and dissipation.

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Article Synopsis
  • A heritage-based flyby mission to Io is proposed to investigate its volcanic activity and internal structure, addressing recommendations from the 2011 Decadal Surveys.
  • The mission will utilize a suite of scientific instruments, including imaging, magnetic field sensors, and a dust analyzer, powered by Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generators.
  • It plans for 10 close flybys with low altitudes, using gravity assists from Venus and Earth to reach Jupiter in 6 years, while incorporating radiation-tolerant components to manage risks.
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