AIP Women in Physics Lecturer for 2019

Published in the Research School of Physics Event Horizon
Vol44 Issue32 12–16 August 2019

The AIP Women in Physics Lecturer for 2019 is Dr Helen Maynard-Casely from ANSTO.

As part of her ACT tour she will be giving a seminar at ANU on Monday August 12 at 4pm in the Seminar room titled: Exploring the materials of the solar system

Apologies for the late hour of the seminar - Helen is busy with 3 school visits as well on this day!

Further details may be found in that abstract below.

Exploring the materials of the solar system with Australia’s central facilities


Our solar system contains a great array of small planetary bodies that show remarkable variability in the chemistry, and subsequent materials, that form on their surfaces. From sulfuric acid hydrates that are spattered on Europa [1], to organic minerals that fall in flurries on Titan [2] to the plastic solids of methane and nitrogen on Pluto [3].
Sadly we’re yet to scoop any sample of these planets and bring them home, however informed by spectral observations from space missions such as Galileo, Cassini and New Horizons, we can re-create their surface chemistries and conditions in the lab. What this has revealed that despite the ‘simplicity’ of the chemistry involved the surfaces are likely to be made up of a large array of materials with potentially planet-shaping properties.
I’ll overview some of the materials we’ve found [4] [5] [6], and why central facilities (like the OPAL neutron source and Australian Synchrotron) have been crucial for this work. Hopefully, I’ll also show how this is very much a growing business, and with new exoplanets being discovered daily there is still a wide range of materials that need to be investigated.


1. Carlson, R.W., R.E. Johnson, and M.S. Anderson, Sulfuric acid on Europa and the radiolytic sulfur cycle. Science, 1999. 286(5437): p. 97-99.
2. Cable, M.L., et al., Titan tholins: Simulating Titan organic chemistry in the Cassini-Huygens era. Chemical Reviews, 2011. 112(3): p. 1882-1909.
3. Grundy, W., et al., Surface compositions across Pluto and Charon. Science, 2016. 351(6279): p. aad9189.
4. Maynard-Casely, H.E., K.S. Wallwork, and M. Avdeev, A new material for the icy Galilean moons: The structure of sulfuric acid hexahydrate. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 2013. 118(9): p. 1895-1902.
5. Maynard-Casely, H.E., et al., A co-crystal between benzene and ethane: a potential evaporite material for Saturn's moon Titan. IUCrJ, 2016. 3(3).
6. Cable, M.L., et al., The Acetylene-Ammonia Co-crystal on Titan. ACS Earth and Space Chemistry, 2018.