Automated Author Profile

Hudson, Reggie

Goddard Space Flight Center

Current S-Index

3.6

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

1.8

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

73.1%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

0

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Data from "Radiation-driven Destruction of Thiophene and Methyl-Substituted Thiophenes"

Tribbett, Patrick D., Yarnall, Yukiko, Y., Hudson, Reggie L., Gerakines, Perry A., Materese, Christopher K. (2024) Radiation-driven Destruction of Thiophene and Methyl-Substituted Thiophenes. Astrobiology https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2024.0038. Abstract: Thiophene and two derivatives (2-methylthiophene and 3-methylthiophene) have been detected on the surface of Mars with the Sample Analysis at Mars instrument suite onboard NASA’s Curiosity rover. Thiophene could serve as a secondary chemical biosignature since the secondary biosynthesis of thiophene is considered an important production pathway. However, it is critical to understand the abiotic formation and destruction of thiophene and its derivatives since these pathways could affect the molecules’ stabilities on planetary surfaces over geological timescales. Here, we present the radiolytic destruction kinetics of thiophene, 2-methylthiophene, and 3-methylthiophene as single-component ices and when diluted in water ice at low temperatures. Using infrared spectroscopy, we determined the destruction rate constants and extrapolated our radiolytic half-lives to the surface of Mars, assuming the measured and modeled surface dose rates. We found that our rate constants strongly depend on temperature and presence of water ice. Based on our determined radiolytic half-life for thiophene under conditions most similar to those of thiophene groups in Martian macromolecules, we expect thiophene to be stable on the surface for significantly longer than the Martian surface exposure age of sites in Gale crater where thiophenes have been detected.

Authors

  • Tribbett, Patrick ;
  • Yarnall, Yukiko ;
  • Hudson, Reggie ;
  • Gerakines, Perry ;
  • Materese, Christopher
0 Citations0 Mentions73% FAIR1.8 Dataset Index
10.5281/zenodo.13850668September 2024

Data from "Radiation-driven Destruction of Thiophene and Methyl-Substituted Thiophenes"

Tribbett, Patrick D., Yarnall, Yukiko, Y., Hudson, Reggie L., Gerakines, Perry A., Materese, Christopher K. (2024) Radiation-driven Destruction of Thiophene and Methyl-Substituted Thiophenes. Astrobiology https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2024.0038. Abstract: Thiophene and two derivatives (2-methylthiophene and 3-methylthiophene) have been detected on the surface of Mars with the Sample Analysis at Mars instrument suite onboard NASA’s Curiosity rover. Thiophene could serve as a secondary chemical biosignature since the secondary biosynthesis of thiophene is considered an important production pathway. However, it is critical to understand the abiotic formation and destruction of thiophene and its derivatives since these pathways could affect the molecules’ stabilities on planetary surfaces over geological timescales. Here, we present the radiolytic destruction kinetics of thiophene, 2-methylthiophene, and 3-methylthiophene as single-component ices and when diluted in water ice at low temperatures. Using infrared spectroscopy, we determined the destruction rate constants and extrapolated our radiolytic half-lives to the surface of Mars, assuming the measured and modeled surface dose rates. We found that our rate constants strongly depend on temperature and presence of water ice. Based on our determined radiolytic half-life for thiophene under conditions most similar to those of thiophene groups in Martian macromolecules, we expect thiophene to be stable on the surface for significantly longer than the Martian surface exposure age of sites in Gale crater where thiophenes have been detected.

Authors

  • Tribbett, Patrick ;
  • Yarnall, Yukiko ;
  • Hudson, Reggie ;
  • Gerakines, Perry ;
  • Materese, Christopher
0 Citations0 Mentions73% FAIR1.8 Dataset Index
10.5281/zenodo.13850669September 2024