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Showing papers by "Frank S. Milos published in 1996"


Journal ArticleDOI
10 May 1996-Science
TL;DR: Temperatures and pressures measured by the Galileo probe during parachute descent into Jupiter's atmosphere essentially followed the dry adiabat between 0.41 and 24 bars, consistent with the absence of a deep water cloud and with the low water content found by the mass spectrometer.
Abstract: Temperatures and pressures measured by the Galileo probe during parachute descent into Jupiter's atmosphere essentially followed the dry adiabat between 0.41 and 24 bars, consistent with the absence of a deep water cloud and with the low water content found by the mass spectrometer. From 5 to 15 bars, lapse rates were slightly stable relative to the adiabat calculated for the observed H2/He ratio, which suggests that upward heat transport in that range is not attributable to simple radial convection. In the upper atmosphere, temperatures of >1000 kelvin at the 0.01-microbar level confirmed the hot exosphere that had been inferred from Voyager occultations. The thermal gradient increased sharply to 5 kelvin per kilometer at a reconstructed altitude of 350 kilometers, as was recently predicted. Densities at 1000 kilometers were 100 times those in the pre-encounter engineering model.

114 citations


Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Jun 1996
TL;DR: The Galileo probe deceleration module contained an experiment which measured the recession of the forebody heat shield during the ablative probe entry into the Jovian atmosphere as mentioned in this paper, and the measured recession was less than predicted near the stagnation point, but exceeded predictions over most of the frustum.
Abstract: The Galileo probe deceleration module contained an experiment which measured the recession of the forebody heat shield during the ablative probe entry into the Jovian atmosphere. A detailed description of the experiment, reduction of the probe data, reconstruction of the heat-shield shape, and comparisons with preflight predictions are presented. Data quality is good during the second half of recession, but excessive noise levels at the onset of ablation prevented the experiment from meeting two of three performance requirements. The recession distribution is surprisingly dissimilar from preflight predictions. Measured recession was less than predicted near the stagnation point, but exceeded predictions over most of the frustum. (Author)

21 citations