Data Set

Harmonic Analysis of the Martian Nitric Oxide Nightglow (version 13) [Data set]

Öffentlich Deposited
https://scholar.colorado.edu/concern/datasets/ff365725n
Abstract
  • The Nitric Oxide (NO) nightglow at Mars was detected and characterized for the first time by Bertaux et al. (2005) using the Spectroscopy for Investigation of Characteristics of the Atmosphere of Mars (SPICAM) instrument, onboard the Mars Express (MEX) spacecraft. Since 2014, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) spacecraft has continuously monitored the NO nightglow thanks the capabilities of the Imaging Ultraviolet Spectrograph (IUVS) instrument. The extensive spatial and temporal coverage acquired by IUVS allowed for the first detection of wave patterns in the NO nightglow. At the equatorial region, a wave-3 structure has been identified as well as a wave-2 structure in the Northern hemisphere for latitudes poleward of 60º. The interplay of these two wave components with latitude, local time, season, and altitude are not yet well understood. This dataset extends the already existing dataset of apoapse disk images observed by MAVEN/IUVS  (https://doi.org/10.25810/fke8-7z93). Please see README file for more detail. 

    The dataset consists of 28,371 Flexible Image Transport System (FITS) files and is approximately 83 GB. The files are available to download from the link in Related URL through Globus. See "Additional Information" below.

Creator
Additional Information
  • To download this data set with Globus, click on the link in the Related URL field, and follow these instructions. Step 1: Sign in to Globus (https://www.globus.org/app/login). If you are with an institution that is registered with Globus, you can simply sign in with your institutional credentials. If your institution is not registered with Globus, you will need to first make an account (https://www.globusid.org/create) before signing in. Step 2: Install Globus Connect Personal (https://www.globus.org/globus-connect-personal) on your local computer. This will establish your local endpoint to which you can download the CU Scholar dataset. You'll give the local endpoint a name (e.g., "Jane Doe's Laptop") Step 3: Click on the Globus URL for the dataset on its CU Scholar landing page. This will bring up the dataset on the left hand side of the Globus file manager. On the right hand side, search for your endpoint name (e.g., "Jane Doe's Laptop"), which will bring up the file system on your local machine (make sure Globus Connect Personal is running). Highlight the dataset files that you want to transfer and click on the blue "start" button to transfer the data to your machine. Data storage for this data set is supported by CU Boulder Research Computing's PetaLibrary.
Academic Affiliation
Zuletzt geändert
  • 2025-08-12
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Resource Type
Urheberrechts-Erklärung
License
DOI
Language
Citation
  • Royer, E., & Jain, S. (2025). Harmonic Analysis of the Martian Nitric Oxide Nightglow (version 13) [Data set] [Data set]. University of Colorado Boulder. https://doi.org/10.25810/DTTE-YC02

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