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Latest Paper:
J R Spencer,
S A Stern,
A F Cheng,
H A Weaver,
D C Reuter,
K Retherford,
A Lunsford,
J M Moore,
O Abramov,
R M C Lopes,
J E Perry,
L Kamp,
M Showalter,
K L Jessup,
F Marchis,
P M Schenk,
C Dumas
Jupiter's moon Io is known to host active volcanoes. In February and March 2007, the New Horizons spacecraft obtained a global snapshot of Io's volcanism. A 350-kilometer-high volcanic plume was seen to emanate from the Tvashtar volcano (62 degrees N, 122 degrees W), and its motion was observed. The plume's morphology and dynamics support nonballistic models of large Io plumes and also suggest that most visible plume particles condensed within the plume rather than being ejected from the source. In images taken in Jupiter eclipse, nonthermal visible-wavelength emission was seen from individual volcanoes near Io's sub-Jupiter and anti-Jupiter points. Near-infrared emission from the brightest volcanoes indicates minimum magma temperatures in the 1150- to 1335-kelvin range, consistent with basaltic composition.
K D Retherford,
J R Spencer,
S A Stern,
J Saur,
D F Strobel,
A J Steffl,
G R Gladstone,
H A Weaver,
A F Cheng,
J Wm Parker,
D C Slater,
M H Versteeg,
M W Davis,
F Bagenal,
H B Throop,
R M C Lopes,
D C Reuter,
A Lunsford,
S J Conard,
L A Young,
J M Moore
The New Horizons (NH) spacecraft observed Io's aurora in eclipse on four occasions during spring 2007. NH Alice ultraviolet spectroscopy and concurrent Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet imaging in eclipse investigate the relative contribution of volcanoes to Io's atmosphere and its interaction with Jupiter's magnetosphere. Auroral brightness and morphology variations after eclipse ingress and egress reveal changes in the relative contribution of sublimation and volcanic sources to the atmosphere. Brightnesses viewed at different geometries are best explained by a dramatic difference between the dayside and nightside atmospheric density. Far-ultraviolet aurora morphology reveals the influence of plumes on Io's electrodynamic interaction with Jupiter's magnetosphere. Comparisons to detailed simulations of Io's aurora indicate that volcanoes supply 1 to 3% of the dayside atmosphere.
W M Grundy,
B J Buratti,
A F Cheng,
J P Emery,
A Lunsford,
W B McKinnon,
J M Moore,
S F Newman,
C B Olkin,
D C Reuter,
P M Schenk,
J R Spencer,
S A Stern,
H B Throop,
H A Weaver
The New Horizons spacecraft observed Jupiter's icy satellites Europa and Ganymede during its flyby in February and March 2007 at visible and infrared wavelengths. Infrared spectral images map H2O ice absorption and hydrated contaminants, bolstering the case for an exogenous source of Europa's "non-ice" surface material and filling large gaps in compositional maps of Ganymede's Jupiter-facing hemisphere. Visual wavelength images of Europa extend knowledge of its global pattern of arcuate troughs and show that its surface scatters light more isotropically than other icy satellites.
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.
Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore 21250, USA. wfwang@umbc.edu
Absolute integrated band intensities of acetone (CH3)2CO in the region of 830-3200 cm(-1) have been measured near the temperatures of 233, 260 and 293 K. The spectra were recorded with a Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer. The investigated region encompasses a total of 15 fundamental bands. At 293 K, for example, the band intensities range from 16.8 to 554.3 cm(-2) atm(-1)(at 300 K). The intensities have uncertainties of about 5%. All the band intensities increase with decreasing temperature. An empirical formulation was introduced which fit this temperature dependence well and which can be used to predict other unmeasured band intensities in the temperature region of approximately 200-300 K. The 295 K intensities reported here agree to within approximately 10% of previously published values, with lower estimated uncertainties. Low temperature intensity measurements are not available in the literature.
M J Mumma,
N Dello Russo,
M A DiSanti,
K Magee-Sauer,
R E Novak,
S Brittain,
T Rettig,
I S McLean,
D C Reuter,
L H Xu
Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics, Code 690, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA. mmumma@kuiper.gsfc.nasa.gov
In the current paradigm, Oort cloud comets formed in the giant planets' region of the solar nebula, where temperatures and other conditions varied greatly. The measured compositions of four such comets (Halley, Hyakutake, Hale-Bopp, and Lee) are consistent with formation from interstellar ices in the cold nebular region beyond Uranus. The composition of comet C/1999 S4 (LINEAR) differs greatly, which suggests that its ices condensed from processed nebular gas, probably in the Jupiter-Saturn region. Its unusual organic composition may require reevaluation of the prebiotic organic material delivered to the young Earth by comets.
Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 21250, USA. msirota@pop600.gsfc.nasa.gov
Absolute band intensities of acetone ((CH3)2CO) in the nu19/nu23 and nu7 band systems near 530 and 777 cm(-1), respectively, were measured at temperatures of 232, 262 and 295 K, using a Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometer. No evident temperature dependence for the band intensities was observed. The dipole moments and the fundamental band intensities were derived in the harmonic oscillator approximation. The results are useful for the spectroscopic retrieval of acetone concentrations in the upper atmosphere.
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