International audienceGlobal maps of Jupiter’s atmospheric temperatures, gaseous composition and aerosol opacity are derived from a programme of 5–20 µm mid-infrared spectroscopic observations using the Texas Echelon Cross Echelle Spectrograph (TEXES) on NASA’s Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF). Image cubes from December 2014 in eight spectral channels, with spectral resolutions of R ∼2000−12,000−12,000 and spatial resolutions of 2–4° latitude, are inverted to generate 3D maps of tropospheric and stratospheric temperatures, 2D maps of upper tropospheric aerosols, phosphine and ammonia, and 2D maps of stratospheric ethane and acetylene. The results are compared to a re-analysis of Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) observations acquired during Cassini’s closest approach to Jupiter in December 2000, demonstrating that this new archive of ground-based mapping spectroscopy can match and surpass the quality of previous investigations, and will permit future studies of Jupiter’s evolving atmosphere. The visibility of cool zones and warm belts varies from channel to channel, suggesting complex vertical variations from the radiatively-controlled upper troposphere to the convective mid-troposphere. We identify mid-infrared signatures of Jupiter’s 5-µm hotspots via simultaneous M, N and Q-band observations, which are interpreted as temperature and ammonia variations in the northern Equatorial Zone and on the edge of the North Equatorial Belt (NEB). Equatorial plumes enriched in NH3 gas are located south-east of NH3-desiccated ‘hotspots’ on the edge of the NEB. Comparison of the hotspot locations in several channels across the 5–20 µm range indicate that these anomalous regions tilt westward with altitude. Aerosols and PH3 are both enriched at the equator but are not co-located with the NH3 plumes. The equatorial temperature minimum and PH3/aerosol maxima have varied in amplitude over time, possibly as a result of periodic equatorial brightenings and the fresh updrafts of disequilibrium material. Temperate mid-latitudes display a correlation between mid-IR aerosol opacity and the white albedo features in visible light (i.e., zones). We find hemispheric asymmetries in the distribution of tropospheric PH3, stratospheric hydrocarbons and the 2D wind field (estimated via the thermal-wind equation) that suggest a differing efficiency of mechanical forcing (e.g., vertical mixing and wave propagation) between the two hemispheres that we argue is driven by dynamics rather than Jupiter’s small seasonal cycle. Jupiter’s stratosphere is notably warmer at northern mid-latitudes than in the south in both 2000 and 2014, although the latter can be largely attributed to strong thermal wave activity near 30°N that dominates the 2014 stratospheric maps and may be responsible for elevated C2H2 in the northern hemisphere. A vertically-variable pattern of temperature and windshear minima and maxima associated with Jupiter’s Quasi Quadrennial Oscillation (QQO) is observed at the equator in both datasets, although the contrasts wer...
Auroral processes are evident in Jupiter's polar atmosphere over a large range in wavelength (X-ray to radio). In particular, previous observations in the mid-infrared (5 to 15 µm) have shown enhanced emission from CH 4 , C 2 H 2 and C 2 H 4 and further stratospheric hydrocarbon species in spatial regions coincident with auroral processes observed at other wavelengths. These regions, described as auroral-related hotspots, observed at approximately 160• W to 200• W (System III) at high-northern latitudes and 330• W to 80• W at high-southern latitudes, indicate that auroral processes modify the thermal structure and composition of the neutral atmosphere. However, previous studies have struggled to differentiate whether the aforementioned enhanced emission is a result of either temperature changes and/or changes in the concentration of the emitting species. We attempt to address this degeneracy in this work by performing a retrieval analysis of Voyager 1-IRIS spectra (acquired in 1979) and Cassini-CIRS spectra (acquired in 2000/2001) of Jupiter. Retrievals of the vertical temperature profile in Cassini-CIRS spectra covering the auroral-related hotspots indicate the presence of two discrete vertical regions of heating at the 1-mbar level and at pressures of 10-µbar and lower. For example, in Cassini-CIRS 2.5 cm −1 'MIRMAP' spectra at 70• N (planetographic) 180• W (centred on the auroral oval), we find temperatures at the 1-mbar level and 10-µbar levels are enhanced by 15.3 ± 5.2 K and 29.6 ± 15.0 K respectively, in comparison to results at 70• N, 60• W in the same dataset. High temperatures at 10-µbar and lower pressures were considered indicative of joule heating, ion and/or electron precipitation, ion-drag and energy released form exothermic ion-chemistry. However, we conclude that the heating at the 1-mbar level is the result of either a layer of aurorally-produced haze particles, which are heated by incident sunlight and/or adiabatic heating by downwelling within the auroral hot-spot region. The former mechanism would be consistent with the vertical profiles of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and haze particles predicted in auroral-chemistry models (Wong et al., 2000(Wong et al., , 2003. Retrievals of C 2 H 2 and C 2 H 6 were also performed and indicate C 2 H 2 is enriched but C 2 H 6 is depleted in auroral regions relative to quiescent regions. For example, using CIRS ∆ν = 2.5 cm −1 spectra, we determined that C 2 H 2 at 0.98 mbar increases by 175.3 ± 89.3 ppbv while C 2 H 6 at 4.7 mbar decreases by 0.86 ± 0.59 ppmv in comparing results at 70• N, 180• W and 70• N, 60• W. These results represent a mean of values retrieved from different initial assumptions and thus we believe they are robust. We believe these contrasts in C 2 H 2 and C 2 H 6 between auroral and quiescent regions can be explained by a coupling of auroral-driven chemistry and horizontal advection. Ion-neutral and electron recombination chemistry in the auroral region enriches all C 2 hydrocarbons but in particular, the unsaturated ...
Auroral hot spots are observed across the Universe at different scales 1 and mark the coupling between a surrounding plasma environment and an atmosphere. Within our own solar system, Jupiter possesses the only resolvable example of this large-scale energy transfer. Jupiter's Northern X-ray aurora is concentrated into a hot spot, which is located at the most poleward regions of the planet's aurora and pulses either periodically 2,3 or irregularly 4,5 . X-ray emission line spectra demonstrate that Jupiter's Northern hot spot is produced by ~10s MeV high charge-state oxygen, sulphur and/or carbon ions 4-6 undergoing charge exchange. Observations instead failed to reveal a similar feature in the South 2,3,7,8 . Here, we report the existence of a persistent Southern X-ray hot spot. Surprisingly, this large-scale Southern auroral structure behaves independently of its Northern counterpart. Using XMM-Newton and Chandra X-ray campaigns, performed in May-June 2016 and March 2007, we show that Jupiter's Northern and Southern spots each exhibit different characteristics, such as different periodic pulsations and uncorrelated changes in brightness. These observations imply that highly energetic, non-conjugate magnetospheric processes sometimes drive the polar regions of Jupiter's dayside magnetosphere. This is in contrast with current models of X-ray generation for Jupiter 9,10 . Understanding the behaviour and drivers of Jupiter's pair of hot spots is critical to the use of X-rays as diagnostics of the wide-range of rapidly rotating celestial bodies that exhibit these auroral phenomena.
The seasonal evolution of Saturn's polar atmospheric temperatures and hydrocarbon composition is derived from a decade of Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) 7-16 µm thermal infrared spectroscopy. We construct a near-continuous record of atmospheric variability poleward of 60• from northern winter/southern summer (2004, L s = 293The hot tropospheric polar cyclones that are entrained by prograde jets within 2-3• of each pole, and the hexagonal shape of the north polar belt, are both persistent features throughout the decade of observations. The hexagon vertices rotated westward by ≈ 30• longitude between March 2007 and April 2013, confirming that they are not stationary in the Voyager-defined System III longitude system as previously thought. Tropospheric temperature contrasts between the cool polar zones (near 80-85• ) and warm polar belts (near 75-80 • ) have varied in both hemispheres, resulting in changes to the vertical windshear on the zonal jets in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. The extended region of south polar stratospheric emission has cooled dramatically poleward of the sharp temperature gradient near 75• S (by approximately -5 K/yr), coinciding with a depletion in the abundances of acetylene (0.030 ± 0.005 ppm/yr) and ethane (0.35 ± 0.1 ppm/yr), and suggestive of stratospheric upwelling with vertical wind speeds of w ≈ +0.1 mm/s. The upwelling appears most intense within 5• latitude of the south pole. This is mirrored by a general warming of the northern polar stratosphere (+5 K/yr) and an enhancement in acetylene (0.030 ± 0.003 ppm/yr) and ethane (0.45 ± 0.1 ppm/yr) abundances that appears to be most intense poleward of 75• N, suggesting subsidence at w ≈ −0.15 mm/s. However, the sharp gradient in stratospheric emission expected to form near 75• N by northern summer solstice (2017, L s = 90has not yet been observed, so we continue to await the development of a northern summer stratospheric vortex. The peak stratospheric warming in the north occurs at lower pressure levels (p < 1 mbar) than the peak stratospheric cooling in the south (p > 1 mbar). Vertical motions are derived from both the temperature field (using the measured rates of temperature change and the deviations from the expectations of radiative equilibrium models) and hydrocarbon distributions (solving the continuity equation). Vertical velocities tend towards zero in the upper troposphere where seasonal temperature contrasts are smaller, except within the tropospheric polar cyclones where w ≈ ±0.02 mm/s. North polar minima in tropospheric and stratospheric temperatures were detected in 2008-2010 (lagging one season, or 6-8 years, behind winter solstice); south polar maxima appear to have occurred before the start of the Cassini observations (1-2 years after summer solstice), consistent with the expectations of radiative climate models. The influence of dynamics implies that the coldest winter temperatures occur in the 75 − 80• region in the stratosphere, and in the cool polar zones in the troposphere, r...
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