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Latest Paper:
Leigh N Fletcher,
Brigette E Hesman,
Patrick G J Irwin,
Kevin H Baines,
Thomas W Momary,
Agustin Sanchez-Lavega,
F Michael Flasar,
Peter L Read,
Glenn S Orton,
Amy Simon-Miller,
Ricardo Hueso,
Gordon L Bjoraker,
Andrei Mamoutkine,
Teresa del Rio-Gaztelurrutia,
Jose M Gomez,
Bonnie Buratti,
Roger N Clark,
Philip D Nicholson,
Christophe Sotin
Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics, Department of Physics, Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PU, UK. fletcher@atm.ox.ac.uk
Saturn's slow seasonal evolution was disrupted in 2010-2011 by the eruption of a bright storm in its northern spring hemisphere. Thermal infrared spectroscopy showed that within a month, the resulting planetary-scale disturbance had generated intense perturbations of atmospheric temperatures, winds, and composition between 20° and 50°N over an entire hemisphere (140,000 kilometers). The tropospheric storm cell produced effects that penetrated hundreds of kilometers into Saturn's stratosphere (to the 1-millibar region). Stratospheric subsidence at the edges of the disturbance produced "beacons" of infrared emission and longitudinal temperature contrasts of 16 kelvin. The disturbance substantially altered atmospheric circulation, transporting material vertically over great distances, modifying stratospheric zonal jets, exciting wave activity and turbulence, and generating a new cold anticyclonic oval in the center of the disturbance at 41°N.
Nature. 2009 Jun 4;459 (7247):678-82
19494910
Sébastien Rodriguez,
Stéphane Le Mouélic,
Pascal Rannou,
Gabriel Tobie,
Kevin H Baines,
Jason W Barnes,
Caitlin A Griffith,
Mathieu Hirtzig,
Karly M Pitman,
Christophe Sotin,
Robert H Brown,
Bonnie J Buratti,
Roger N Clark,
Phil D Nicholson
Laboratoire de Planétologie et Géodynamique, CNRS, UMR 6112, Université de Nantes, 2 rue de la Houssinière, 44000 Nantes, France. sebastien.rodriguez@cea.fr
Clouds on Titan result from the condensation of methane and ethane and, as on other planets, are primarily structured by circulation of the atmosphere. At present, cloud activity mainly occurs in the southern (summer) hemisphere, arising near the pole and at mid-latitudes from cumulus updrafts triggered by surface heating and/or local methane sources, and at the north (winter) pole, resulting from the subsidence and condensation of ethane-rich air into the colder troposphere. General circulation models predict that this distribution should change with the seasons on a 15-year timescale, and that clouds should develop under certain circumstances at temperate latitudes ( approximately 40 degrees ) in the winter hemisphere. The models, however, have hitherto been poorly constrained and their long-term predictions have not yet been observationally verified. Here we report that the global spatial cloud coverage on Titan is in general agreement with the models, confirming that cloud activity is mainly controlled by the global circulation. The non-detection of clouds at latitude approximately 40 degrees N and the persistence of the southern clouds while the southern summer is ending are, however, both contrary to predictions. This suggests that Titan's equator-to-pole thermal contrast is overestimated in the models and that its atmosphere responds to the seasonal forcing with a greater inertia than expected.
Tom Stallard,
Steve Miller,
Makenzie Lystrup,
Nicholas Achilleos,
Emma J Bunce,
Christopher S Arridge,
Michele K Dougherty,
Stan W H Cowley,
Sarah V Badman,
Dean L Talboys,
Robert H Brown,
Kevin H Baines,
Bonnie J Buratti,
Roger N Clark,
Christophe Sotin,
Phil D Nicholson,
Pierre Drossart
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK.
The majority of planetary aurorae are produced by electrical currents flowing between the ionosphere and the magnetosphere which accelerate energetic charged particles that hit the upper atmosphere. At Saturn, these processes collisionally excite hydrogen, causing ultraviolet emission, and ionize the hydrogen, leading to H(3)(+) infrared emission. Although the morphology of these aurorae is affected by changes in the solar wind, the source of the currents which produce them is a matter of debate. Recent models predict only weak emission away from the main auroral oval. Here we report images that show emission both poleward and equatorward of the main oval (separated by a region of low emission). The extensive polar emission is highly variable with time, and disappears when the main oval has a spiral morphology; this suggests that although the polar emission may be associated with minor increases in the dynamic pressure from the solar wind, it is not directly linked to strong magnetospheric compressions. This aurora appears to be unique to Saturn and cannot be explained using our current understanding of Saturn's magnetosphere. The equatorward arc of emission exists only on the nightside of the planet, and arises from internal magnetospheric processes that are currently unknown.
R H Brown,
L A Soderblom,
J M Soderblom,
R N Clark,
R Jaumann,
J W Barnes,
C Sotin,
B Buratti,
K H Baines,
P D Nicholson
Department of Planetary Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA. rhb@lpl.arizona.edu
Titan was once thought to have global oceans of light hydrocarbons on its surface, but after 40 close flybys of Titan by the Cassini spacecraft, it has become clear that no such oceans exist. There are, however, features similar to terrestrial lakes and seas, and widespread evidence for fluvial erosion, presumably driven by precipitation of liquid methane from Titan's dense, nitrogen-dominated atmosphere. Here we report infrared spectroscopic data, obtained by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) on board the Cassini spacecraft, that strongly indicate that ethane, probably in liquid solution with methane, nitrogen and other low-molecular-mass hydrocarbons, is contained within Titan's Ontario Lacus.
Nature. 2008 May 8;453 (7192):196-9
18464736
Cit:2
Glenn S Orton,
Padma A Yanamandra-Fisher,
Brendan M Fisher,
A James Friedson,
Paul D Parrish,
Jesse F Nelson,
Amber Swenson Bauermeister,
Leigh Fletcher,
Daniel Y Gezari,
Frank Varosi,
Alan T Tokunaga,
John Caldwell,
Kevin H Baines,
Joseph L Hora,
Michael E Ressler,
Takuya Fujiyoshi,
Tetsuharu Fuse,
Hagop Hagopian,
Terry Z Martin,
Jay T Bergstralh,
Carly Howett,
William F Hoffmann,
Lynne K Deutsch,
Jeffrey E Van Cleve,
Eldar Noe,
Joseph D Adams,
Marc Kassis,
Eric Tollestrup
MS 169-237.
Observations of oscillations of temperature and wind in planetary atmospheres provide a means of generalizing models for atmospheric dynamics in a diverse set of planets in the Solar System and elsewhere. An equatorial oscillation similar to one in the Earth's atmosphere has been discovered in Jupiter. Here we report the existence of similar oscillations in Saturn's atmosphere, from an analysis of over two decades of spatially resolved observations of its 7.8-mum methane and 12.2-mum ethane stratospheric emissions, where we compare zonal-mean stratospheric brightness temperatures at planetographic latitudes of 3.6 degrees and 15.5 degrees in both the northern and the southern hemispheres. These results support the interpretation of vertical and meridional variability of temperatures in Saturn's stratosphere as a manifestation of a wave phenomenon similar to that on the Earth and in Jupiter. The period of this oscillation is 14.8 +/- 1.2 terrestrial years, roughly half of Saturn's year, suggesting the influence of seasonal forcing, as is the case with the Earth's semi-annual oscillation.
P Drossart,
G Piccioni,
J C Gérard,
M A Lopez-Valverde,
A Sanchez-Lavega,
L Zasova,
R Hueso,
F W Taylor,
B Bézard,
A Adriani,
F Angrilli,
G Arnold,
K H Baines,
G Bellucci,
J Benkhoff,
J P Bibring,
A Blanco,
M I Blecka,
R W Carlson,
A Coradini,
A Di Lellis,
T Encrenaz,
S Erard,
S Fonti,
V Formisano,
T Fouchet,
R Garcia,
R Haus,
J Helbert,
N I Ignatiev,
P Irwin,
Y Langevin,
S Lebonnois,
D Luz,
L Marinangeli,
V Orofino,
A V Rodin,
M C Roos-Serote,
B Saggin,
D M Stam,
D Titov,
G Visconti,
M Zambelli,
C Tsang,
Eleonora Ammannito,
Alessandra Barbis,
Rainer Berlin,
Carlo Bettanini,
Angelo Boccaccini,
Guillaume Bonnello,
Marc Bouyé,
Fabrizio Capaccioni,
Alejandro Cardesin,
Francesco Carraro,
Giovanni Cherubini,
Massimo Cosi,
Michele Dami,
Maurizio De Nino,
Davide Del Vento,
Marco Di Giampietro,
Alessandro Donati,
Olivier Dupuis,
Sylvie Espinasse,
Anna Fabbri,
Agnès Fave,
Iacopo Ficai Veltroni,
Gianrico Filacchione,
Katia Garceran,
Yamina Ghomchi,
Maurizio Giustizi,
Brigitte Gondet,
Yann Hello,
Florence Henry,
Stefan Hofer,
Gerard Huntzinger,
Juergen Kachlicki,
René Knoll,
Driss Kouach,
Alessandro Mazzoni,
Riccardo Melchiorri,
Giuseppe Mondello,
Francesco Monti,
Christian Neumann,
Fabrizio Nuccilli,
Jérôme Parisot,
Claudio Pasqui,
Stefano Perferi,
Gisbert Peter,
Alain Piacentino,
Carlo Pompei,
Jean-Michel Réess,
Jean-Pierre Rivet,
Antonio Romano,
Natalie Russ,
Massimo Santoni,
Adelmo Scarpelli,
Alain Sémery,
Alain Soufflot,
Douchane Stefanovitch,
Enrico Suetta,
Fabio Tarchi,
Nazzareno Tonetti,
Federico Tosi,
Bernd Ulmer
The upper atmosphere of a planet is a transition region in which energy is transferred between the deeper atmosphere and outer space. Molecular emissions from the upper atmosphere (90-120 km altitude) of Venus can be used to investigate the energetics and to trace the circulation of this hitherto little-studied region. Previous spacecraft and ground-based observations of infrared emission from CO(2), O(2) and NO have established that photochemical and dynamic activity controls the structure of the upper atmosphere of Venus. These data, however, have left unresolved the precise altitude of the emission owing to a lack of data and of an adequate observing geometry. Here we report measurements of day-side CO(2) non-local thermodynamic equilibrium emission at 4.3 microm, extending from 90 to 120 km altitude, and of night-side O(2) emission extending from 95 to 100 km. The CO(2) emission peak occurs at approximately 115 km and varies with solar zenith angle over a range of approximately 10 km. This confirms previous modelling, and permits the beginning of a systematic study of the variability of the emission. The O(2) peak emission happens at 96 km +/- 1 km, which is consistent with three-body recombination of oxygen atoms transported from the day side by a global thermospheric sub-solar to anti-solar circulation, as previously predicted.
G Piccioni,
P Drossart,
A Sanchez-Lavega,
R Hueso,
F W Taylor,
C F Wilson,
D Grassi,
L Zasova,
M Moriconi,
A Adriani,
S Lebonnois,
A Coradini,
B Bézard,
F Angrilli,
G Arnold,
K H Baines,
G Bellucci,
J Benkhoff,
J P Bibring,
A Blanco,
M I Blecka,
R W Carlson,
A Di Lellis,
T Encrenaz,
S Erard,
S Fonti,
V Formisano,
T Fouchet,
R Garcia,
R Haus,
J Helbert,
N I Ignatiev,
P G J Irwin,
Y Langevin,
M A Lopez-Valverde,
D Luz,
L Marinangeli,
V Orofino,
A V Rodin,
M C Roos-Serote,
B Saggin,
D M Stam,
D Titov,
G Visconti,
M Zambelli,
Eleonora Ammannito,
Alessandra Barbis,
Rainer Berlin,
Carlo Bettanini,
Angelo Boccaccini,
Guillaume Bonnello,
Marc Bouye,
Fabrizio Capaccioni,
Alejandro Cardesin Moinelo,
Francesco Carraro,
Giovanni Cherubini,
Massimo Cosi,
Michele Dami,
Maurizio De Nino,
Davide Del Vento,
Marco Di Giampietro,
Alessandro Donati,
Olivier Dupuis,
Sylvie Espinasse,
Anna Fabbri,
Agnes Fave,
Iacopo Ficai Veltroni,
Gianrico Filacchione,
Katia Garceran,
Yamina Ghomchi,
Maurizio Giustini,
Brigitte Gondet,
Yann Hello,
Florence Henry,
Stefan Hofer,
Gerard Huntzinger,
Juergen Kachlicki,
René Knoll,
Kouach Driss,
Alessandro Mazzoni,
Riccardo Melchiorri,
Giuseppe Mondello,
Francesco Monti,
Christian Neumann,
Fabrizio Nuccilli,
Jerome Parisot,
Claudio Pasqui,
Stefano Perferi,
Gisbert Peter,
Alain Piacentino,
Carlo Pompei,
Jean-Michel Reess,
Jean-Pierre Rivet,
Antonio Romano,
Natalie Russ,
Massimo Santoni,
Adelmo Scarpelli,
Alain Semery,
Alain Soufflot,
Douchane Stefanovitch,
Enrico Suetta,
Fabio Tarchi,
Nazzareno Tonetti,
Federico Tosi,
Bernd Ulmer
Venus has no seasons, slow rotation and a very massive atmosphere, which is mainly carbon dioxide with clouds primarily of sulphuric acid droplets. Infrared observations by previous missions to Venus revealed a bright 'dipole' feature surrounded by a cold 'collar' at its north pole. The polar dipole is a 'double-eye' feature at the centre of a vast vortex that rotates around the pole, and is possibly associated with rapid downwelling. The polar cold collar is a wide, shallow river of cold air that circulates around the polar vortex. One outstanding question has been whether the global circulation was symmetric, such that a dipole feature existed at the south pole. Here we report observations of Venus' south-polar region, where we have seen clouds with morphology much like those around the north pole, but rotating somewhat faster than the northern dipole. The vortex may extend down to the lower cloud layers that lie at about 50 km height and perhaps deeper. The spectroscopic properties of the clouds around the south pole are compatible with a sulphuric acid composition.
Kevin H Baines,
Amy A Simon-Miller,
Glenn S Orton,
Harold A Weaver,
Allen Lunsford,
Thomas W Momary,
John Spencer,
Andrew F Cheng,
Dennis C Reuter,
Donald E Jennings,
G R Gladstone,
Jeffrey Moore,
S Alan Stern,
Leslie A Young,
Henry Throop,
Padma Yanamandra-Fisher,
Brendan M Fisher,
Joseph Hora,
Michael E Ressler
Although lightning has been seen on other planets, including Jupiter, polar lightning has been known only on Earth. Optical observations from the New Horizons spacecraft have identified lightning at high latitudes above Jupiter up to 80 degrees N and 74 degrees S. Lightning rates and optical powers were similar at each pole, and the mean optical flux is comparable to that at nonpolar latitudes, which is consistent with the notion that internal heat is the main driver of convection. Both near-infrared and ground-based 5-micrometer thermal imagery reveal that cloud cover has thinned substantially since the 2000 Cassini flyby, particularly in the turbulent wake of the Great Red Spot and in the southern half of the equatorial region, demonstrating that vertical dynamical processes are time-varying on seasonal scales at mid- and low latitudes on Jupiter.
D C Reuter,
A A Simon-Miller,
A Lunsford,
K H Baines,
A F Cheng,
D E Jennings,
C B Olkin,
J R Spencer,
S A Stern,
H A Weaver,
L A Young
Several observations of Jupiter's atmosphere made by instruments on the New Horizons spacecraft have implications for the stability and dynamics of Jupiter's weather layer. Mesoscale waves, first seen by Voyager, have been observed at a spatial resolution of 11 to 45 kilometers. These waves have a 300-kilometer wavelength and phase velocities greater than the local zonal flow by 100 meters per second, much higher than predicted by models. Additionally, infrared spectral measurements over five successive Jupiter rotations at spatial resolutions of 200 to 140 kilometers have shown the development of transient ammonia ice clouds (lifetimes of 40 hours or less) in regions of strong atmospheric upwelling. Both of these phenomena serve as probes of atmospheric dynamics below the visible cloud tops.
Glenn S Orton,
A James Friedson,
Kevin H Baines,
Terry Z Martin,
Robert A West,
John Caldwell,
Heidi B Hammel,
Jay T Bergstralh,
Michael E Malcom,
William F Golisch,
David M Griep,
Charles D Kaminski,
Alan T Tokunaga,
Richard Baron,
Mark Shure
The spatial organization and time dependence of Jupiter's stratospheric temperatures have been measured by observing thermal emission from the 7.8-micrometer CH(4) band. These temperatures, observed through the greater part of a Jovian year, exhibit the influence of seasonal radiative forcing. Distinct bands of high temperature are located at the poles and mid-latitudes, while the equator alternates between warm and cold with a period of approximately 4 years. Substantial longitudinal variability is often observed within the warm mid-latitude bands, and occasionally elsewhere on the planet. This variability includes small, localized structures, as well as large-scale waves with wavelengths longer than approximately 30,000 kilometers. The amplitudes of the waves vary on a time scale of approximately 1 month; structures on a smaller scale may have lifetimes of only days. Waves observed in 1985, 1987, and 1988 propagated with group velocities less than +/-30 meters per second.
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