S
Sean C. Solomon
Researcher at Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory
Publications - 764
Citations - 43261
Sean C. Solomon is an academic researcher from Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mercury (element) & Lithosphere. The author has an hindex of 106, co-authored 764 publications receiving 39206 citations. Previous affiliations of Sean C. Solomon include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & Carnegie Institution for Science.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparison of ultra-low-frequency waves at Mercury under northward and southward IMF
Scott A. Boardsen,Scott A. Boardsen,James A. Slavin,Brian J. Anderson,Haje Korth,Sean C. Solomon +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the trajectories of the MESSENGER magnetometer during M2 and M1 with those made during M1, and compare the differences in magnetic activity during these two encounters.
Journal ArticleDOI
Improving solar wind modeling at Mercury: Incorporating transient solar phenomena into the WSA‐ENLIL model with the Cone extension
R. M. Dewey,Daniel N. Baker,Brian J. Anderson,Mehdi Benna,Catherine L. Johnson,Catherine L. Johnson,Haje Korth,Daniel J. Gershman,Daniel J. Gershman,George C. Ho,William E. McClintock,Dusan Odstrcil,Dusan Odstrcil,Lydia C. Philpott,Jim M. Raines,David Schriver,James A. Slavin,Sean C. Solomon,Sean C. Solomon,Reka M. Winslow,Reka M. Winslow,Thomas H. Zurbuchen +21 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a Cone extension of the WSA-ENLIL coupled model is proposed to incorporate CMEs and other transient solar phenomena into the model, and the model is used to predict the effects of strong solar wind disturbances on the Mercury system.
Journal Article
Topography of Venus and earth - A test for the presence of plate tectonics
TL;DR: A comparison of earth and Venus topography by use of Pioneer/Venus radar altimetry is examined in this paper, showing that while the earth has a bimodal height distribution, Venus displays a unimodal configuration, with 60% of the planet surface within 500 m of the modal planet radius.
Journal ArticleDOI
On Recent Large Antarctic Ozone Holes and Ozone Recovery Metrics
Journal ArticleDOI
The relationship of source parameters of ridge-crest and transform earthquakes to the thermal structure of oceanic lithosphere
Sean C. Solomon,Norman C. Burr +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize the source parameters of large earthquakes on ridge crests and transform faults, including magnitude, seismic moment M0, apparent stress η \ gs and stress drop Δσ, according to local plate velocity v and, for transforms, to ridge offset L and average fault width W estimated by Brune's method.