Alexander Clarence Berne (@enceladusdude) 's Twitter Profile
Alexander Clarence Berne

@enceladusdude

Planetary Geophysicist at @Caltech ❄️ @NASA FINESST 2022 . Working on the Moon and Enceladus.

ID: 1508597692091432962

linkhttp://alexcberne.com calendar_today29-03-2022 00:11:46

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Sci Fi Author H S Rivney (@hsrivney) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My favorite moon. Mark my words, we will discover Carbon-based life inside this moon. And build an underground city, then call it Hershel. 😁 abcnews.go.com/amp/Internatio…

Erika  (@explorecosmos_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Enceladus, Saturn's moon, experiences tidal heating due to gravitational forces, maintaining a global ocean beneath its icy crust. 1/ 👉🏻 nature.com/articles/s4156…

Enceladus, Saturn's moon, experiences tidal heating due to gravitational forces, maintaining a global ocean beneath its icy crust. 1/

👉🏻 nature.com/articles/s4156…
UW News (@uwnews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Saturn has 146 confirmed moons – more than any other planet in the solar system – but one called Enceladus stands out. It appears to have the ingredients for life," Fabian Klenner, UW Earth & Space Sci, writes in The Conversation U.S.. theconversation.com/saturns-ocean-…

Sheri 🚀 (@spacegeeksheri) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A must read 😱 and we must go! Enceladus Spills Its Guts through Strike–Slip Motion - caltech.edu caltech.edu/about/news/enc…

Planetary Plot of the Week (@planetaryplots) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This week’s figure shows how strike-slip motion can drive the jet activity from Enceladus’ tiger stripes. The authors modeled tidally driven fault motion and find that this can produce the observed plume activity, which has two unique peaks throughout the moon’s orbit. (1/2)

This week’s figure shows how strike-slip motion can drive the jet activity from Enceladus’ tiger stripes. The authors modeled tidally driven fault motion and find that this can produce the observed plume activity, which has two unique peaks throughout the moon’s orbit. (1/2)
Planetary Plot of the Week (@planetaryplots) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This week, we have a figure showing a series of landslides in a crater on Mars. A fault that cuts across the western crater rim is interpreted as their source, and by crater counting the landslide deposits, the authors find evidence for surprisingly recent tectonic activity (1/2)

This week, we have a figure showing a series of landslides in a crater on Mars. A fault that cuts across the western crater rim is interpreted as their source, and by crater counting the landslide deposits, the authors find evidence for surprisingly recent tectonic activity (1/2)
Peter James (@peterbjames) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I am excited and honored to announce that I won a NASA Early Career Award! This will support research that my group at Baylor has been doing, and it will fund outreach efforts across Texas. I’ll give a longer explanation of our plans at the next LPSC, but here’s an overview (🧵):