Planetary Lake Lander: Using Technology Relevant to Titan’s Exploration to Investigate the Impact of Deglaciation on Past and Present Planetary Lakes
Conference Paper, Proceedings of 43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC '12), March, 2012
Abstract
Planetary Lake Lander (PLL) is a project funded by the NASA Astrobiology Science & Technology for Exploring Planet (ASTEP) program. It regroups an international team of scientists and engineers from four countries and nine institutions. Its overarching goal is to develop and test technology and systems relevant to the exploration of Titan's lakes and seas while studying the impact of melting ice on past and present planetary lakes.
BibTeX
@conference{Cabrol-2012-7442,author = {Nathalie Cabrol and Edmund Grin and Chris Haberle and Jeff Moersch and Robert Jacobsen and Ruben Sommaruga and Erich Fleming and Angela Detweiler and Alex Echeverria and Yolanda Blanco and Luis Rivas and Liam Pedersen and Trey Smith and David Wettergreen and Cecilia Demergasso and Victor Parro and Terrence W. Fong and Lee Bebout},
title = {Planetary Lake Lander: Using Technology Relevant to Titan's Exploration to Investigate the Impact of Deglaciation on Past and Present Planetary Lakes},
booktitle = {Proceedings of 43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (LPSC '12)},
year = {2012},
month = {March},
}
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