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UAF students explore Mars
Chappelow, a research assistant and graduate student, is usually at his desk in Fairbanks, but investigating the terrain of Mars. Students in the Geophysical Institute's planetary science group spend as much time on other planets as human beings possibly can from 60 million miles away.
Chappelow is one of a handful of students making correlations between the Alaska landscape and those of other planets while working on graduate degrees within the Department of Geology and Geophysics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The planet Mars dominates the students' research due to its similarities to Earth--like the Arctic, the martian landscape is riddled with permafrost.
Herrick joined the Geophysical Institute in 2004, after 10 years as a staff scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, Texas. Sharpton says the addition of Herrick provided the nascent program a needed boost. Herrick lends his expertise on impact craters and works with data from NASA's unmanned missions to sites throughout the solar system. Making comparisons between the landscape of the Arctic and that of Mars is a much cheaper approach to space exploration. To study these parallels requires a diverse scientific background, one that calls for a solid command of the fundamentals. "Students must be well rounded in physics, chemistry and math, but they also have to have this artistic eye that can interpret maps and landforms," Sharpton said. "In planetary sciences, we're combining the theoretical with empirical data."
Chappelow isn't the only student poring over thousands of images of Mars' surface. Students Katie Hessen and Sharon Pitiss, both pursuing master's degrees in geophysics, are studying the topography and statistics of impact craters on Mars. Pitiss uses the information she gathers to piece together the origin and evolution of Mars' hematite region, Sinus Meridiani. Understanding Mars' topography is also the interest of Ph.D. candidate Fred Calef. Calef's background in geology aids his studies of the Red Planet's topography, but craters aren't his only interest. His research also focuses on the ice-related features of the planet and is aided by images gathered by Spirit and Opportunity, two rovers NASA landed on Mars in January 2004 that continue to gather data as they roam the martian landscape. MER Entry, Descent and Landing on Mars . Calef says the rovers are a tremendous help to planetary scientists, but a good foundation in our own planet's geology is key to understanding our next-door neighbor in the solar system.
Until a manned mission to Mars is planned, the graduate students in the planetary science project can only do the next best thing: study the planet by comparing it to something they're very familiar with--the Alaska landscape. Six students are currently working on graduate degrees with an emphasis on planetary science within the Department of Geology and Geophysics. Sharpton says the group's modest size works to its benefit. "A small program like ours allows for close contact with students, and we're tightly focused," he said.
With the success of NASA's two rovers on Mars, interest in the Red Planet is growing. Sharpton believes the recent explosion of new pictures and data from the planet may spur more students to pursue studies in planetary sciences. "This is a very captivating subject area. Kids seem to drop their video games and begin paying attention when it comes to space," he said. "In terms of motivating kids, studies in planetary sciences are hard to beat." For more information, please contact:
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Contact newsroom@uaf.edu for more information. Newsroom | Marketing and Communications Last modified March 28, 2008 by Marketing and Communications Web Developer. | ||||||