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Ingrid J. Daubar
~Contact~
~Work~
Research:
Scientist at Brown University, Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, Planetary Geosciences Group, 2019-current.
Scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 2014-current. (My page at JPL.)
Research topics:
- Current cratering on Mars and the Moon, seasonal variability of impact rates
- Seismic detectability of impacts
- Small crater morphology
- Albedo effects around new impacts and landed missions
- Secondary cratering statistics and chronology issues
- Dust devil tracks: lifetimes and dust deposition rates on Mars
- Dust mobility and albedo
Missions:
HiRISE camera on MRO:
2017-present: Co-Investigator, Impact Cratering Science Theme Lead
2005-2013: Uplink Operations
Juno Radiation Monitoring Investigation Team, 2016-present:
Observation planning
PDS archiving
Radiation environment data analysis
InSight mission, 2014-present:
Impacts Working Group Co-Lead
Landing site certification and safety
Instrument Site Selection Working Group
Europa Clipper, 2016-present:
Investigation Scientist for the Europa Imaging System (EIS)
~Education~
Ph.D., Planetary Sciences,
2014,
University of Arizona
M.S., Planetary Sciences,
2002,
University of Arizona
B.A., Astronomy,
1999,
Cornell University
More info:
Read my C.V. (HTML or PDF)
Search for me on the ADS Abstract Service.
I'm on Google Scholar.
Connect to my LinkedIn profile.
The current time in UTC is:
Left: HiRISE observation PSP_007338_2640,
the first image to catch martian avalanches in motion.
Last updated: January 2020
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