Dr. John Weirich
Senior Scientist
Currently resides in Arizona
Targets of Interest: Asteroids, Bennu, Dione, Enceladus, Iapetus, Mercury, Meteorites, Moon, Rhea, Small Satellites
Disciplines/Techniques: Geochemistry, Geology, Impacts, Mass Spectrometry, Meteoritics, Mineralogy, Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy, Shape Modeling
Missions: OSIRIS-REx
Instruments: Electron Microprobe, Mass Spectrometers
Dr. John Weirich specializes in constructing hi-resolution topography of various small bodies such as asteroids, planetary satellites, the Moon, and Mercury. He uses spacecraft images to construct Digital Terrain Models (DTM) with the software suite Stereophotoclinometry (SPC) written by PSI’s Dr. Robert Gaskell. He was part of the OSIRIS-REx mission, which collected regolith from asteroid Bennu in 2020. In addition to certifying SPC as NASA Class B software, his DTMs guided the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft in orbit around Bennu and during its descent to Bennu's surface. He also has extensive experience with geochemistry of shocked extraterrestrial materials, age dating of impact melt using the 40Ar/39Ar chronometer, and Ar diffusion, though is no longer active in this field.
Active Projects
Relation between Cold Traps and Putative Ice Deposits
NASA Discovery Data Analysis Program
Principal Investigator
Project Team
Photometric Study of How the Physical Properties of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko Evolve with the Perihelion Passage
NASA Discovery Data Analysis Program
Principal Investigator
Project Team
Pyroclastic Eruption Conditions on the Moon and Mercury
NASA Solar System Workings Program
Principal Investigator
Project Team
External Partners
- Smithsonian
- USGS
- JHU/APL
Understanding Radiation Processing and Alteration of Icy Regoliths
NASA Cassini Data Analysis Program
Principal Investigator
