PTYS/LPL Faculty
Caitlin Griffith
Ph.D., 1991, State University of New York, Stony Brook
Years with LPL: 2002 to Emeritus in 2023
Astrobiology, Exoplanets, Planetary Astronomy, Planetary Atmospheres, Planetary Formation and Evolution, Planetary Surfaces, Titan & Outer Solar System
Dr. Griffith investigates the chemical, dynamical and thermal structures of planetary atmospheres, using ground-based and spacecraft observations. The data are interpreted with radiative transfer calculations to measure the temperature, composition and dynamical signatures of planetary atmospheres. These results are analyzed with simple chemical, radiative and dynamical models to address questions on atmospheric structure and evolution. Dr. Griffith also works with mathematical methods to analyze large astronomical data bases. This work involves Principal Component Analyses and basic Artificial Intelligence techniques.
Dr. Griffith has worked extensively to understand Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. Titan resembles Earth, as it sports, rain, rivers, storms and seas. However, on Titan, methane plays the role that water plays on Earth. Yet, how Titan evolved to its current state is not understood. The ultraviolet radiation from the Sun irreversibly destroys methane, the by-products of which form a thick atmospheric haze, which ends up as organic sediments on Titan’s surface. There is no obvious source to supply the atmosphere with methane, except from the evaporation of methane from the polar lakes. But the methane in the lakes and Titan’s atmosphere, and will be exhausted in soon by geological time scales. One open question is where does the CH4 come from? Work by Dr. Griffith supports the idea that subsurface methane furnishes Titan's CH4 atmosphere, and thus the organic-rich atmosphere. The communication between the surface and the interior plays a major role on Earth and, likely on Titan. Yet without understanding of the history of Titan, it is not clear whether prolonged production of complex organics, sourced by subterranean reservoirs, are common in cool CH4-rich exoplanetary atmospheres.
Dr. Griffith also investigates the structures and compositions of giant planets and extrasolar planets. She finds that these efforts are complementary as we can gain much more detailed information on planets in our Solar System, which are not possible for exoplanets.
Student Collaborations/Advising
Former Students
- Kyle Pearson, 2020 (Ph.D. PTYS)
- Robert Zellem, 2015 (Ph.D. PTYS)
- Johanna Teske, 2014 (Ph.D. Astronomy)
- Paulo Penteado, 2009 (Ph.D. PTYS)
Complete publications list available from: NASA ADS Author search: Caitlin A. Griffith
Recent refereed publications (NASA ADS): Years 2019 through 2022
Rodriguez, Sébastien, Vinatier, Sandrine, Cordier, Daniel, Tobie, Gabriel, Achterberg, Richard K., Anderson, Carrie M., Badman, Sarah V., Barnes, Jason W., Barth, Erika L., Bézard, Bruno, Carrasco, Nathalie, Charnay, Benjamin, Clark, Roger N., Coll, Patrice, Cornet, Thomas, Coustenis, Athena, Couturier-Tamburelli, Isabelle, Dobrijevic, Michel, Flasar, F. Michael, de Kok, Remco, Freissinet, Caroline, Galand, Marina, Gautier, Thomas, Geppert, Wolf D., Griffith, Caitlin A., Gudipati, Murthy S., Hadid, Lina Z., Hayes, Alexander G., Hendrix, Amanda R., Jaumann, Ralf, Jennings, Donald E., Jolly, Antoine, Kalousova, Klara, Koskinen, Tommi T., Lavvas, Panayotis, Lebonnois, Sébastien, Lebreton, Jean-Pierre, Le Gall, Alice, Lellouch, Emmanuel, Le Mouélic, Stéphane, Lopes, Rosaly M. C., Lora, Juan M., Lorenz, Ralph D., Lucas, Antoine, MacKenzie, Shannon, Malaska, Michael J., Mandt, Kathleen, Mastrogiuseppe, Marco, Newman, Claire E., Nixon, Conor A., Radebaugh, Jani, Rafkin, Scot C., Rannou, Pascal, Sciamma-O'Brien, Ella M., Soderblom, Jason M., Solomonidou, Anezina, Sotin, Christophe, Stephan, Katrin, Strobel, Darrell, Szopa, Cyril, Teanby, Nicholas A., Turtle, Elizabeth P., Vuitton, Véronique, & West, Robert A. 2022, Experimental Astronomy. Science goals and new mission concepts for future exploration of Titan's atmosphere, geology and habitability: titan POlar scout/orbitEr and in situ lake lander and DrONe explorer (POSEIDON)
Zellem, Robert T., Swain, Mark R., Cowan, Nicolas B., Bryden, Geoffrey, Komacek, Thaddeus D., Colavita, Mark, Ardila, David, Roudier, Gael M., Fortney, Jonathan J., Bean, Jacob, Line, Michael R., Griffith, Caitlin A., Shkolnik, Evgenya L., Kreidberg, Laura, Moses, Julianne I., Showman, Adam P., Stevenson, Kevin B., Wong, Andre, Chapman, John W., Ciardi, David R., Howard, Andrew W., Kataria, Tiffany, Kempton, Eliza M. -R., Latham, David, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Meléndez, Jorge, & Parmentier, Vivien 2019, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Constraining Exoplanet Metallicities and Aerosols with the Contribution to ARIEL Spectroscopy of Exoplanets (CASE)
Griffith, Caitlin A., Penteado, Paulo F., Turner, Jake D., Neish, Catherine D., Mitri, Giuseppe, Montiel, Nicholas J., Schoenfeld, Ashley, & Lopes, Rosaly M. C. 2019, Nature Astronomy. A corridor of exposed ice-rich bedrock across Titan's tropical region
Waldmann, I. P. & Griffith, C. A. 2019, Nature Astronomy. Mapping Saturn using deep learning
Pearson, Kyle A., Griffith, Caitlin A., Zellem, Robert T., Koskinen, Tommi T., & Roudier, Gael M. 2019, The Astronomical Journal. Ground-based Spectroscopy of the Exoplanet XO-2b Using a Systematic Wavelength Calibration
- Researchers Find Ice Feature on Saturn’s Giant Moon - April 29, 2019
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What Deep Learning Reveals About Saturn’s Storms - April 29, 2019
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CV-Griffith-2017.pdf | 179.94 KB |
Semester | Course | Day/Time | Location | Resources | |
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Spring 2021 | PTYS 517-1 | Monday, Wednesday 11:00a.m.-12:15p.m. | Kuiper 312 | Syllabus D2L |
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Fall 2020 | PTYS 521-1 | Monday, Wednesday 12:30-1:45p.m. | Kuiper 301 | Syllabus | D2L |
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Fall 2016 | PTYS/ATMO 656A-1 | | https://www.lpl.arizona.edu/classes/Griffith_656A |
View LPL Evening Lecture from September 13, 2016, Storms, Lakes & the Methane Cycle on Titan Lure us with Earth-like Qualities to an Exotic World
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