Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
The Jovian InfraRed Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) instrument, aboard the NASA/Juno spacecraft, is composed of
an infrared imager (IMG) and a spectrometer (SPE) in the 2-5 m range [1], sharing a common optical head.
The imager is further split in two spectral channels: L-filter, centered at 3.45 m with a 290-nm bandwidth, and
M-filter, centered at 4.78 m with a 480-nm bandwidth. In this work, we used the M-filter of the IMG for the
context and the SPE for the characterization analysis.
Since the first orbits, JIRAM observed several oval vortices in Jupiter's atmosphere with the highest spatial
resolution achieved so far from space-borne infrared instruments. In particular, JIRAM highlighted a line of
closely spaced oval features in Jupiter's southern hemisphere, between 30S and 45S [2], as well as other
persistent vortices in the northern hemisphere. Moreover, the radiance map at 2.57 m identifies three vortex
structures at stationary positions [3].
We retrieved maps of column densities and altitudes for an NH3 cloud and a photochemical haze using a Bayesian
data inversion approach in the range 2.4-3 m, which is sensitive to changes in high tropospheric clouds and
stratospheric hazes, as well as to gaseous ammonia. The deep well-mixed volume mixing ratio and the relative
humidity for gaseous ammonia were also retrieved. Moreover, the synergistic use of the aforementioned spectral
range with the one between 4 and 5 m can be used to better constrain the cloudy atmospheric structure. Our
results suggest different vortex activities for the studied ovals. Vertical atmospheric dynamics together with
considerations about the ammonia condensation could explain our maps providing evidence of cyclonic and
anticyclonic structures as well as of different atmospheric conditions inside them.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Jupiter atmosphere; mid-latitude dynamic; JIRAM spectral data
Elenco autori:
Dinelli, BIANCA MARIA; Moriconi, MARIA LUISA
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