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A Radar Determination of the Rotation of the Planet Mercury - Nature

  • ️DYCE, R. B.
  • ️Sat Jun 19 1965
  • Letter
  • Published: 19 June 1965

Nature volume 206page 1240 (1965)Cite this article

Abstract

DURING the recent inferior conjunction of the planet Mercury in April, 1965, radar observations were obtained by the Arecibo Ionospheric Observatory in Puerto Rico (operated by Cornell University with the support of the Advanced Research Projects Agency under a Research Contract with the Air Force Office of Scientific Research). The system operated at a frequency of 430 Mc/s, with an antenna gain of 56 dB and a transmitted power of 2 MW. The resulting sensitivity was sufficient to obtain significant echoes not only from the nearest part of the planetary disk but also from more distant regions, removed by up to 0.06 of the planet's radius. By using short transmitted pulses of 500 µsec duration, it was possible to isolate the echo power from these more distant regions, and to carry out a Fourier analysis of their spectral composition.

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  1. Cornell-Sydney University Astronomy Center, Arecibo Ionospheric Observatory, Arecibo, Puerto Rico

    G. H. PETTENGILL & R. B. DYCE

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  1. G. H. PETTENGILL

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  2. R. B. DYCE

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PETTENGILL, G., DYCE, R. A Radar Determination of the Rotation of the Planet Mercury. Nature 206, 1240 (1965). https://doi.org/10.1038/2061240a0

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  • Issue Date: 19 June 1965

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/2061240a0

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