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Composition, Roughness, and Topography from Radar Backscatter at Selk Crater, the Dragonfly Landing Site

  • Léa E. Bonnefoy
  • , Antoine Lucas
  • , Alexander G. Hayes
  • , Sébastien Rodriguez
  • , Valerio Poggiali
  • , Daniel E. Lalich
  • , Ralph D. Lorenz
  • , Alice Le Gall
  • Université Paris Diderot
  • Cornell Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science
  • Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
  • (CNRS/UVSQ/UPMC)
  • Institut Universitaire de France

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Selk crater region is the future landing site of NASA’s Dragonfly mission to Titan. The region was imaged by the Cassini RADAR at incidence angles from 5° to 72° and at various polarization angles. Using this data set, we mapped six terrain units and assembled a backscatter curve for each, providing normalized backscatter cross section (σ0) as a function of incidence angle. By fitting these backscatter curves with a sum of a quasi-specular and diffuse terms and evaluating three alternative formulations of the first and two for the second, we extracted the best-fit surface effective dielectric constant, rms slope, and scattering albedo. Although the parameters’ absolute values are model dependent, relative values between terrains indicate real variations in surface properties. The results are consistent with the impact exposing and fracturing a low-loss tangent material such as the water-ice bedrock, which is likely also present in the hummocky terrains and to a lesser degree in the plains and interdune regions. The dunes and dark terrains are composed of smooth, uniform material with low dielectric constant (1.5–2.3 median values for all models) compatible with organic sand. A diffuse single-scattering model enabled independent derivation of the dielectric constant from high-incidence observations, leading to low values (<2) over all terrains, indicating a depolarizing (sub)surface. Finally, radarclinometry revealed lateral variations in rim height, which remains below 300 m along the SARTopo profile but reaches up to 600 m at other locations, hinting at a rim less eroded than previously thought.

Original languageEnglish
Article number201
JournalPlanetary Science Journal
Volume3
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2022
Externally publishedYes

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