P

Paul Swanson

California Institute of Technology

Publishes on Spacecraft Design and Technology, Planetary Science and Exploration, Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics. 70 papers and 489 citations.

70Publications
489Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Observations of interstellar H2O emission at 183 gigahertz
J. W. Waters, Ramesh K. Kakar, T. B. H. Kuiper et al.|The Astrophysical Journal|1980
Cited by 63

Observations of the 183-GHz rotational transition of water vapor in interstellar molecular clouds are reported. The observations were made with a portable double-sideband superheterodyne radiometer used with the 91-cm Cassegrain telescope on board the Kuiper Airborne Observatory. An emission feature was detected in the direction of the Kleinmann-Low nebula in Orion with a peak antenna temperature of 15 K, a local standard of rest velocity of 8 km/sec, and a width of 15 km/sec. A plateau component of the emission profile is attributed to the 1-arcmin region characteristic of plateau emission from other observed molecules, with emission enhanced over that expected for thermal excitation, while the spike component observed is consistent with an optically thick source of the size of the molecular ridge in Orion at a temperature of 50 K and a column density greater than or equal to 3 x 10 to the 17th/sq cm, implying that H2O is one of the more abundant species in the Orion Molecular Cloud. Emission at 183 GHz was not detected in Sgr A, Sgr B2, W3, W43, W49, W51, DR 21, NGC 1333, NGC 7027, GL 2591 or the Rho Oph cloud; it may have been detected in M 17.

Aircraft search for millimeter‐wavelength emission by stratospheric ClO
J. W. Waters, J. J. Gustincic, Ramesh K. Kakar et al.|Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres|1979
Cited by 51

Three millimeter‐wavelength transitions of ClO were searched for in the stratospheric emission spectrum during May–August 1977 using aircraft‐based instruments. The measurements indicate that if stratospheric ClO has a vertical distribution of the form predicted by present photochemical models, then the ClO volume mixing ratio at the profile peak did not exceed 10 −9 at the time and place of the measurements. The observed spectra suggest the presence of ClO in the stratosphere but do not provide a definitive detection.