Dr. Phil Christensen is the 2018 recipient of the Whipple Award, the highest honor given by the Planetary Sciences section of AGU. Christensen is a leader in thermal infrared spectroscopy and radiometry who has contributed to technological developments for spacecraft missions and fundamental material science for the study of minerals and planetary surfaces.
Trained at the University of California, Los Angeles, Christensen’s first mission instrument was selected for the ill-fated Mars Observer and ultimately flown on Mars Global Surveyor. His instruments have been selected for eight missions to date, spanning exploration of the solar system from the asteroid belt to Jupiter.
Christensen has developed new techniques to infer the phases and relative abundances of minerals using carefully measured laboratory spectra of key minerals as end members. With instruments on two orbiters and two rovers on Mars, he has made multiple discoveries in the surface composition and near-surface physical properties. Ultimately, his instruments have provided global maps of the major compositional provinces on Mars and measurements of the seasonal cycles, temperature, dust, and water vapor in the atmosphere over multiple Martian years.
With his deep experience in planetary exploration, Christensen chaired the Mars panel in the last Planetary Science Decadal Survey and the National Academy of Science’s Committee on Astrobiology and Planetary Science. Christensen has demonstrated selfless leadership, and wisdom in his leadership, of the planetary community. Christensen’s deep impact on planetary science is also reflected in his dedication to teaching and training many students and postdoctoral researchers.
AGU honors Dr. Christensen for his fundamental contributions to exploration and discovery in planetary science.
—Sarah T. Stewart, University of California, Davis
Diurnal surface temperature data collected from the Emirates Mars Infrared Spectrometer have been used to characterize dust redistribution on Mars ...