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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.
Latest citations:
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.
Other papers by authors:
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.
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.
S A Stern,
H A Weaver,
A J Steffl,
M J Mutchler,
W J Merline,
M W Buie,
E F Young,
L A Young,
J R Spencer
Southwest Research Institute, 1050 Walnut Street, Suite 400, Boulder, Colorado 80302, USA. astern@swri.edu
The two newly discovered satellites of Pluto (P1 and P2) have masses that are small compared to both Pluto and Charon-that is, between 5 x 10(-4) and 1 x 10(-5) of Pluto's mass, and between 5 x 10(-3) and 1 x 10(-4) of Charon's mass. This discovery, combined with the constraints on the absence of more distant satellites of Pluto, reveal that Pluto and its moons comprise an unusual, highly compact, quadruple system. These facts naturally raise the question of how this puzzling satellite system came to be. Here we show that P1 and P2's proximity to Pluto and Charon, the fact that P1 and P2 are on near-circular orbits in the same plane as Pluto's large satellite Charon, along with their apparent locations in or near high-order mean-motion resonances, all probably result from their being constructed from collisional ejecta that originated from the Pluto-Charon formation event. We also argue that dust-ice rings of variable optical depths form sporadically in the Pluto system, and that rich satellite systems may be found--perhaps frequently--around other large Kuiper belt objects.
Nature. 2006 Feb 23;439 (7079):943-5
16495991
H A Weaver,
S A Stern,
M J Mutchler,
A J Steffl,
M W Buie,
W J Merline,
J R Spencer,
E F Young,
L A Young
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Space Department, 11100 Johns Hopkins Road, Laurel, Maryland 20723-6099, USA. hal.weaver@jhuapl.edu
Pluto's first known satellite, Charon, was discovered in 1978. It has a diameter (approximately 1,200 km) about half that of Pluto, which makes it larger, relative to its primary, than any other moon in the Solar System. Previous searches for other satellites around Pluto have been unsuccessful, but they were not sensitive to objects less, similar150 km in diameter and there are no fundamental reasons why Pluto should not have more satellites. Here we report the discovery of two additional moons around Pluto, provisionally designated S/2005 P 1 (hereafter P1) and S/2005 P 2 (hereafter P2), which makes Pluto the first Kuiper belt object known to have multiple satellites. These new satellites are much smaller than Charon, with estimates of P1's diameter ranging from 60 km to 165 km, depending on the surface reflectivity; P2 is about 20 per cent smaller than P1. Although definitive orbits cannot be derived, both new satellites appear to be moving in circular orbits in the same orbital plane as Charon, with orbital periods of approximately 38 days (P1) and approximately 25 days (P2).
R L McNutt Jr,
D K Haggerty,
M E Hill,
S M Krimigis,
S Livi,
G C Ho,
R S Gurnee,
B H Mauk,
D G Mitchell,
E C Roelof,
D J McComas,
F Bagenal,
H A Elliott,
L E Brown,
M Kusterer,
J Vandegriff,
S A Stern,
H A Weaver,
J R Spencer,
J M Moore
When the solar wind hits Jupiter's magnetic field, it creates a long magnetotail trailing behind the planet that channels material out of the Jupiter system. The New Horizons spacecraft traversed the length of the jovian magnetotail to >2500 jovian radii (RJ; 1 RJ identical with 71,400 kilometers), observing a high-temperature, multispecies population of energetic particles. Velocity dispersions, anisotropies, and compositional variation seen in the deep-tail (greater, similar 500 RJ) with a approximately 3-day periodicity are similar to variations seen closer to Jupiter in Galileo data. The signatures suggest plasma streaming away from the planet and injection sites in the near-tail region (approximately 200 to 400 RJ) that could be related to magnetic reconnection events. The tail structure remains coherent at least until it reaches the magnetosheath at 1655 RJ.
Science. 2005 May 13;308:975-8
15894528
Cit:9
F M Flasar,
R K Achterberg,
B J Conrath,
P J Gierasch,
V G Kunde,
C A Nixon,
G L Bjoraker,
D E Jennings,
P N Romani,
A A Simon-Miller,
B Bézard,
A Coustenis,
P G J Irwin,
N A Teanby,
J Brasunas,
J C Pearl,
M E Segura,
R C Carlson,
A Mamoutkine,
P J Schinder,
A Barucci,
R Courtin,
T Fouchet,
D Gautier,
E Lellouch,
A Marten,
R Prangé,
S Vinatier,
D F Strobel,
S B Calcutt,
P L Read,
F W Taylor,
N Bowles,
R E Samuelson,
G S Orton,
L J Spilker,
T C Owen,
J R Spencer,
M R Showalter,
C Ferrari,
M M Abbas,
F Raulin,
S Edgington,
P Ade,
E H Wishnow
Temperatures obtained from early Cassini infrared observations of Titan show a stratopause at an altitude of 310 kilometers (and 186 kelvin at 15 degrees S). Stratospheric temperatures are coldest in the winter northern hemisphere, with zonal winds reaching 160 meters per second. The concentrations of several stratospheric organic compounds are enhanced at mid- and high northern latitudes, and the strong zonal winds may inhibit mixing between these latitudes and the rest of Titan. Above the south pole, temperatures in the stratosphere are 4 to 5 kelvin cooler than at the equator. The stratospheric mole fractions of methane and carbon monoxide are (1.6 +/- 0.5) x 10(-2) and (4.5 +/- 1.5) x 10(-5), respectively.
F M Flasar,
R K Achterberg,
B J Conrath,
J C Pearl,
G L Bjoraker,
D E Jennings,
P N Romani,
A A Simon-Miller,
V G Kunde,
C A Nixon,
B Bézard,
G S Orton,
L J Spilker,
J R Spencer,
P G J Irwin,
N A Teanby,
T C Owen,
J Brasunas,
M E Segura,
R C Carlson,
A Mamoutkine,
P J Gierasch,
P J Schinder,
M R Showalter,
C Ferrari,
A Barucci,
R Courtin,
A Coustenis,
T Fouchet,
D Gautier,
E Lellouch,
A Marten,
R Prangé,
D F Strobel,
S B Calcutt,
P L Read,
F W Taylor,
N Bowles,
R E Samuelson,
M M Abbas,
F Raulin,
P Ade,
S Edgington,
S Pilorz,
B Wallis,
E H Wishnow
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)/Goddard Space Flight Center, Code 693, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA. f.m.flasar@nasa.gov
Stratospheric temperatures on Saturn imply a strong decay of the equatorial winds with altitude. If the decrease in winds reported from recent Hubble Space Telescope images is not a temporal change, then the features tracked must have been at least 130 kilometers higher than in earlier studies. Saturn's south polar stratosphere is warmer than predicted from simple radiative models. The C/H ratio on Saturn is seven times solar, twice Jupiter's. Saturn's ring temperatures have radial variations down to the smallest scale resolved (100 kilometers). Diurnal surface temperature variations on Phoebe suggest a more porous regolith than on the jovian satellites.
V G Kunde,
F M Flasar,
D E Jennings,
B Bézard,
D F Strobel,
B J Conrath,
C A Nixon,
G L Bjoraker,
P N Romani,
R K Achterberg,
A A Simon-Miller,
P Irwin,
J C Brasunas,
J C Pearl,
M D Smith,
G S Orton,
P J Gierasch,
L J Spilker,
R C Carlson,
A A Mamoutkine,
S B Calcutt,
P L Read,
F W Taylor,
T Fouchet,
P Parrish,
A Barucci,
R Courtin,
A Coustenis,
D Gautier,
E Lellouch,
A Marten,
R Prangé,
Y Biraud,
C Ferrari,
T C Owen,
M M Abbas,
R E Samuelson,
F Raulin,
P Ade,
C J Césarsky,
K U Grossman,
A Coradini
Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA. Virgil.G.Kunde.1@gsfc.nasa.gov
The Composite Infrared Spectrometer observed Jupiter in the thermal infrared during the swing-by of the Cassini spacecraft. Results include the detection of two new stratospheric species, the methyl radical and diacetylene, gaseous species present in the north and south auroral infrared hot spots; determination of the variations with latitude of acetylene and ethane, the latter a tracer of atmospheric motion; observations of unexpected spatial distributions of carbon dioxide and hydrogen cyanide, both considered to be products of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacts; characterization of the morphology of the auroral infrared hot spot acetylene emission; and a new evaluation of the energetics of the northern auroral infrared hot spot.
Nature. 2004 Jan 8;427 (6970):132-5
14712270
F M Flasar,
V G Kunde,
R K Achterberg,
B J Conrath,
A A Simon-Miller,
C A Nixon,
P J Gierasch,
P N Romani,
B Bézard,
P Irwin,
G L Bjoraker,
J C Brasunas,
D E Jennings,
J C Pearl,
M D Smith,
G S Orton,
L J Spilker,
R Carlson,
S B Calcutt,
P L Read,
F W Taylor,
P Parrish,
A Barucci,
R Courtin,
A Coustenis,
D Gautier,
E Lellouch,
A Marten,
R Prangé,
Y Biraud,
T Fouchet,
C Ferrari,
T C Owen,
M M Abbas,
R E Samuelson,
F Raulin,
P Ade,
C J Césarsky,
K U Grossman,
A Coradini
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Code 693, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771, USA.
The Earth's equatorial stratosphere shows oscillations in which the east-west winds reverse direction and the temperatures change cyclically with a period of about two years. This phenomenon, called the quasi-biennial oscillation, also affects the dynamics of the mid- and high-latitude stratosphere and weather in the lower atmosphere. Ground-based observations have suggested that similar temperature oscillations (with a 4-5-yr cycle) occur on Jupiter, but these data suffer from poor vertical resolution and Jupiter's stratospheric wind velocities have not yet been determined. Here we report maps of temperatures and winds with high spatial resolution, obtained from spacecraft measurements of infrared spectra of Jupiter's stratosphere. We find an intense, high-altitude equatorial jet with a speed of approximately 140 m s(-1), whose spatial structure resembles that of a quasi-quadrennial oscillation. Wave activity in the stratosphere also appears analogous to that occurring on Earth. A strong interaction between Jupiter and its plasma environment produces hot spots in its upper atmosphere and stratosphere near its poles, and the temperature maps define the penetration of the hot spots into the stratosphere.
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Center for Water Research.
This article shows how local knowledge may be valuably integrated into a scientific approach in the study of large and complex hydrological systems where data collection at high resolution is a challenge. This claim is supported through a study of the hydrodynamics of a large lake where qualitative data collected from professional fishers was combined with theory to develop a hypothesis that was then verified by numerical modeling. First the fishermen's narratives were found to describe with accuracy internal wave motions that were evident in water column temperature records, which revealed their practical knowledge of the lake's hydrodynamics. Second, local knowledge accounts emphasized the recurrent formation of mesoscale gyres and return flows in certain zones of the lake in stratified conditions, which did not appear in the physical data because of limitations of sampling resolution. We hypothesized that these features developed predominantly because of the interaction of wind-driven internal motions with the lake's bathymetry, and the Earth's rotation in the widest areas of the basin. Numerical simulation results corroborated the fishers' descriptions of the flow paths and supported the hypothesis about their formation. We conclude that the collaboration between scientific and local knowledge groups, although an unusual approach for a physical discipline of the geosciences, is worth exploring in the pursuit of a more comprehensive understanding of complex geophysical systems such as large lakes.
Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA.
Imaging of gastrointestinal (GI) motility remotely through the abdominal wall has always been a tradeoff between resolution and invasiveness. Skin reflects and/or absorbs wavelengths of radiation in the ultraviolet and visible ranges, but is largely transparent to both high-energy radiation (Gamma to X-rays;<0.1-10 nm) and low-energy radiation (infrared to radio waves; 700 nm-10 m). Imaging using short wavelength radiation such as X-ray cinematography has excellent spatial and temporal resolution, but ionization can produce acute and long-term deleterious effects to the patient or animal. Other 'slice-based' imaging techniques such as ultrasound/MRI/CT minimize tissue damage, but are limited in the planar area that can be imaged in a timely fashion. This viewpoint article will summarize and explore the implications of recent advances in infrared imaging of the GI tract, in particular, an article published in this issue of NGM entitled 'In vivo dynamic imaging of intestinal motions using diet-related autofluorescence' in which the authors have used infrared imaging in combination with that most elusive ingredient, standard mouse chow, to capture the motions of the mouse GI tract.
Nature. 2011 Jul 7;475 (7354):75-7
21734705
G Fischer,
W S Kurth,
D A Gurnett,
P Zarka,
U A Dyudina,
A P Ingersoll,
S P Ewald,
C C Porco,
A Wesley,
C Go,
M Delcroix
Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Schmiedlstrasse 6, A-8042 Graz, Austria. georg.fischer@oeaw.ac.at
Lightning discharges in Saturn's atmosphere emit radio waves with intensities about 10,000 times stronger than those of their terrestrial counterparts. These radio waves are the characteristic features of lightning from thunderstorms on Saturn, which last for days to months. Convective storms about 2,000 kilometres in size have been observed in recent years at planetocentric latitude 35° south (corresponding to a planetographic latitude of 41° south). Here we report observations of a giant thunderstorm at planetocentric latitude 35° north that reached a latitudinal extension of 10,000 kilometres-comparable in size to a 'Great White Spot'-about three weeks after it started in early December 2010. The visible plume consists of high-altitude clouds that overshoot the outermost ammonia cloud layer owing to strong vertical convection, as is typical for thunderstorms. The flash rates of this storm are about an order of magnitude higher than previous ones, and peak rates larger than ten per second were recorded. This main storm developed an elongated eastward tail with additional but weaker storm cells that wrapped around the whole planet by February 2011. Unlike storms on Earth, the total power of this storm is comparable to Saturn's total emitted power. The appearance of such storms in the northern hemisphere could be related to the change of seasons, given that Saturn experienced vernal equinox in August 2009.
Nature. 2011 Jul 7;475 (7354):71-4
21734704
A Sánchez-Lavega,
T del Río-Gaztelurrutia,
R Hueso,
J M Gómez-Forrellad,
J F Sanz-Requena,
J Legarreta,
E García-Melendo,
F Colas,
J Lecacheux,
L N Fletcher,
D Barrado-Navascués,
D Parker
Departamento de Física Aplicada I, Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería, Universidad del País Vasco, Alameda Urquijo s/n, 48013 Bilbao, Spain. agustin.sanchez@ehu.es
Convective storms occur regularly in Saturn's atmosphere. Huge storms known as Great White Spots, which are ten times larger than the regular storms, are rarer and occur about once per Saturnian year (29.5 Earth years). Current models propose that the outbreak of a Great White Spot is due to moist convection induced by water. However, the generation of the global disturbance and its effect on Saturn's permanent winds have hitherto been unconstrained by data, because there was insufficient spatial resolution and temporal sampling to infer the dynamics of Saturn's weather layer (the layer in the troposphere where the cloud forms). Theoretically, it has been suggested that this phenomenon is seasonally controlled. Here we report observations of a storm at northern latitudes in the peak of a weak westward jet during the beginning of northern springtime, in accord with the seasonal cycle but earlier than expected. The storm head moved faster than the jet, was active during the two-month observation period, and triggered a planetary-scale disturbance that circled Saturn but did not significantly alter the ambient zonal winds. Numerical simulations of the phenomenon show that, as on Jupiter, Saturn's winds extend without decay deep down into the weather layer, at least to the water-cloud base at pressures of 10-12 bar, which is much deeper than solar radiation penetrates.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. pmarcus@me.berkeley.edu
The east-west striped pattern of clouds in Jupiter's weather layer is accompanied by a zonal flow containing 12 eastward-going jet streams alternating in latitude with westward-going jet streams. Based on theory, simulation and observations of the Earth's oceans and atmosphere, it is conjectured that Jupiter's weather layer is made of bands of constant potential vorticity (PV), where the interfaces between bands are at the latitudes of the maxima of the eastward-going jet streams. It is speculated that the mixing of PV on Jupiter is analogous to the mixing of salt in the ocean by the Phillips effect, which causes the salt density to form a monotonic 'staircase'. It is hypothesized that the PV in Jupiter's weather layer is also a staircase, decreasing from north to south. PV is a function of vorticity, as well as parameters with unknown values, e.g. the vertical stratification and the zonal flow beneath the observable weather layer. Therefore, these hypotheses cannot be tested directly. Using an atmospheric model that contains these unknown parameters, we solved the inverse problem and found values of the unknown parameters (and their uncertainties) that best fit Jovian observations. The unknown parameters influence how the zonal flow interacts with large vortices, e.g. the Great Red Spot (GRS; the largest and longest-lived Jovian vortex, centred at 23° S) and the Oval BA (the second largest vortex, centred at 33° S). Although we found that the PV distribution is approximately piecewise-constant and that the peaks of the eastward-going jet streams are at the latitudes of PV interfaces, there is also a PV interface at 20° S, where there is a westward-going jet stream. We find that the zonal PV is not a monotonic staircase due to the 'backwards' interface at 20° S. We show that this backwards interface is necessary to make the GRS nearly round, and that without that interface, the Red Spot would be highly elongated in the east-west direction and probably unstable.
Appl Opt. 1979 Mar 1;18 (5):641-8
20208793
A partly cryogenic Fabry-Perot interferometer with a spectral resolution of 10(5) for the 10-microm atmospheric window is described. It consists of a series of two etalons with ZnSe plates, one of which is cooled, and a cooled grating spectrometer with a Si:As detector. The logic of its design is discussed, and details are given of the parts which are special for the ir wavelength region. Preliminary data on the performance indicate that the instrument meets the specifications.
Appl Opt. 1966 Jan 1;5 (1):87-91
20048791
Cit:4
Most infrared systems and instruments require mechanical chopping or scanning mechanisms for modulating the radiation signal. For some applications, particularly in space, it is desirable to eliminate sliding or rotating mechanical components. One means of accomplishing this is by means of frustrated internal reflection. Spacings and motions of the order of 0.05 wavelength are necessary which are difficult to control in the visible spectral region, but, in the 8-12 micro infrared region, the scale is twenty times greater, and a modulation cell based on this principle becomes quite practical. The characteristics of frustrated internal reflection are briefly summarized, and a modulation cell constructed on these principles is described. This cell has a clear aperture of 12.7 mm and produces 80% modulation of 10- micro radiation. A lead zirconate titanate piezoelectric stack is used for moving the frustrating element, which gives a frequency response higher than 6 kc/sec.
J A Whiteway,
L Komguem,
C Dickinson,
C Cook,
M Illnicki,
J Seabrook,
V Popovici,
T J Duck,
R Davy,
P A Taylor,
J Pathak,
D Fisher,
A I Carswell,
M Daly,
V Hipkin,
A P Zent,
M H Hecht,
S E Wood,
L K Tamppari,
N Renno,
J E Moores,
M T Lemmon,
F Daerden,
P H Smith
Department of Earth and Space Science and Engineering, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The light detection and ranging instrument on the Phoenix mission observed water-ice clouds in the atmosphere of Mars that were similar to cirrus clouds on Earth. Fall streaks in the cloud structure traced the precipitation of ice crystals toward the ground. Measurements of atmospheric dust indicated that the planetary boundary layer (PBL) on Mars was well mixed, up to heights of around 4 kilometers, by the summer daytime turbulence and convection. The water-ice clouds were detected at the top of the PBL and near the ground each night in late summer after the air temperature started decreasing. The interpretation is that water vapor mixed upward by daytime turbulence and convection forms ice crystal clouds at night that precipitate back toward the surface.
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, MC 0225, La Jolla, California 92093-0225.
Infrasound arrays typically consist of several microbarometers separated by distances that provide predictable signal time separations, forming the basis for processing techniques that estimate the phase velocity direction. The directional resolution depends on the noise level and is proportional to the number of these point sensors; additional sensors help attenuate noise and improve direction resolution. An alternative approach is to form an array of directional line sensors, each of which emulates a line of many microphones that instantaneously integrate pressure change. The instrument response is a function of the orientation of the line with respect to the signal wavefront. Real data recorded at the Pinon Flat Observatory in southern California and synthetic data show that this spectral property can be exploited with multiple line sensors to determine the phase velocity direction with a precision comparable to a larger aperture array of microbarometers. Three types of instrument-response-dependent beamforming and an array deconvolution technique are evaluated. The results imply that an array of five radial line sensors, with equal azimuthal separation and an aperture that depends on the frequency band of interest, provides directional resolution while requiring less space compared to an equally effective array of five microbarometers with rosette wind filters.
Arnaud Mahieux,
Sophie Berkenbosch,
Roland Clairquin,
Didier Fussen,
Nina Mateshvili,
Eddy Neefs,
Dennis Nevejans,
Bojan Ristic,
Ann Carine Vandaele,
Valérie Wilquet,
Denis Belyaev,
Anna Fedorova,
Oleg Korablev,
Eric Villard,
Franck Montmessin,
Jean-Loup Bertaux
Solar occultation in the infrared, part of the Spectoscopy for Investigation of Characteristics of the Atmosphere of Venus (SPICAV) instrument onboard Venus Express, combines an echelle grating spectrometer with an acousto-optic tunable filter (AOTF). It performs solar occultation measurements in the IR region at high spectral resolution. The wavelength range probed allows a detailed chemical inventory of Venus's atmosphere above the cloud layer, highlighting the vertical distribution of gases. A general description of the instrument and its in-flight performance is given. Different calibrations and data corrections are investigated, in particular the dark current and thermal background, the nonlinearity and pixel-to-pixel variability of the detector, the sensitivity of the instrument, the AOTF properties, and the spectral calibration and resolution.
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