C
Carly Howett
Researcher at Southwest Research Institute
Publications - 123
Citations - 4776
Carly Howett is an academic researcher from Southwest Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pluto & Enceladus. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 116 publications receiving 4028 citations. Previous affiliations of Carly Howett include University of Oxford.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Small Satellites of Pluto as Observed by New Horizons
Harold A. Weaver,Marc W. Buie,Bonnie J. Buratti,William M. Grundy,Tod R. Lauer,Catherine B. Olkin,Alex Parker,Simon B. Porter,Mark R. Showalter,John R. Spencer,S. A. Stern,Anne J. Verbiscer,William B. McKinnon,Jeffrey M. Moore,Stuart J. Robbins,Paul M. Schenk,Kelsi N. Singer,Olivier S. Barnouin,A. F. Cheng,Carolyn M. Ernst,Carey M. Lisse,D. E. Jennings,Allen Lunsford,Dennis C. Reuter,Douglas P. Hamilton,David E. Kaufmann,Kimberly Ennico,Leslie A. Young,Ross A. Beyer,Ross A. Beyer,Richard P. Binzel,Veronica J. Bray,A. L. Chaikin,Jason C. Cook,Dale P. Cruikshank,C. M. Dalle Ore,A. M. Earle,G. R. Gladstone,Carly Howett,Ivan Linscott,Francis Nimmo,J. Wm. Parker,S. Philippe,Silvia Protopapa,Harold J. Reitsema,Bernard Schmitt,T. Stryk,Michael E. Summers,Constantine Tsang,Henry B. Throop,Oliver L. White,Amanda M. Zangari +51 more
TL;DR: The New Horizons results on Pluto’s small moons help to elucidate the conditions under which the Pluto system formed and evolved, and massively increase the understanding of the bodies in the outer solar system.
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Global and temporal variations in hydrocarbons and nitriles in Titan's stratosphere for northern winter observed by Cassini/CIRS
Nicholas A Teanby,Pgj Irwin,R. de Kok,Conor A. Nixon,A. Coustenis,Emilie Royer,S. B. Calcutt,Neil Bowles,Leigh N. Fletcher,Carly Howett,Fredric W. Taylor +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the first measurements of composition variations within the polar vortex were presented, which display increasing abundances right up to 90˚ N. The lack of a homogeneous abundance-latitude variation within the vortex indicates limited horizontal mixing and suggests that subsidence is greatest at the vortex core.
Journal ArticleDOI
A high-amplitude thermal inertia anomaly of probable magnetospheric origin on Saturn’s moon Mimas
Carly Howett,John R. Spencer,Paul M. Schenk,Robert E. Johnson,Chris Paranicas,Terry Hurford,Anne J. Verbiscer,M. E. Segura +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a thermal anomaly on the surface of Mimas has been detected, where a sharp V-shaped boundary, centered at 0°N and 180°W, separates relatively warm daytime temperatures from a cooler anomalous region occupying low to mid-latitudes on the leading hemisphere.
Journal ArticleDOI
Pluto's haze as a surface material
William M. Grundy,Tanguy Bertrand,Richard P. Binzel,Marc W. Buie,Bonnie J. Buratti,Andrew F. Cheng,Jason C. Cook,Dale P. Cruikshank,Spencer Devins,C. M. Dalle Ore,C. M. Dalle Ore,Alissa M. Earle,K. Ennico,François Forget,Peter Gao,G. R. Gladstone,Carly Howett,D. E. Jennings,Joshua A. Kammer,Tod R. Lauer,Ivan Linscott,Carey M. Lisse,Allen W. Lunsford,William B. McKinnon,Catherine B. Olkin,Alex Parker,Silvia Protopapa,Eric Quirico,D. C. Reuter,Bernard Schmitt,Kelsi N. Singer,J.A. Spencer,S. A. Stern,Darrell F. Strobel,Michael E. Summers,Harold A. Weaver,G. Weigle,Michael L. Wong,Eliot F. Young,Leslie A. Young,Xi Zhang +40 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how a steady supply of atmospheric haze might affect three distinct provinces on Pluto, and they pose the question of why they each look so different from one another if the same haze material is settling out onto all of them.