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Latest Paper:
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.
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.
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