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1.
Radiative-convective equilibrium models for Jupiter and Saturn have been produced in a study centered primarily on the stratospheric energy balance and the possible role of aerosol heating. These models are compared directly to the thermal structure profiles obtained from Voyager radio occultation measurements. The method is based on a straightforward flux divergence formulation derived from earlier work (J. S. Hogan, S. I. Rasool, and T. Encrenaz 1969, J. Atmos. Sci.26, 898–905). The balance between absorbed and emitted energies is computed iteratively at each level in the atmosphere, assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium and employing a standard treatment of opacities. Results for Jupiter indicate that a dust-free model (no aerosol heating) furnishes a good mean thermal profile for the stratosphere when compared with the Voyager 1 radio occultation (RSS) measurements. These observations of the equatorial region (0° and 12°S, respectively) exhibit periodic vertical structure. Of course, among many possible complications, the Voyager profiles may not represent typical excursions from the mean. The aerosol heat depositions required to match these profiles exactly, relative to the nominal dust-free model, are reasonably consistent with independent estimates for “continuum” absorbers. Other interpretations are discussed, along with a survey of problems encountered in intercomparing the lower portions (P ? 300 mb) of the models, the RSS profiles, and a recent IRIS equatorial profile. Although aerosol heating cannot be ruled out at low latitudes on Jupiter, our results indicate that it may not be required to reproduce the Voyager 1 RSS profiles. On the other hand, heating by aerosols or some other absorber seems necessary in order to match the high-latitude Voyager 2 RSS temperature profile. The Saturn models are relatively simple and in good-to-excellent agreement with the Voyager 2 RSS profiles at all levels. Our comparisons indicate that aerosol heating played a minor role in Saturn's midlatitude stratospheric energy balance at the time of the Voyager 2 encounter. These models, however, may need to be reassessed once the hydrocarbon concentrations have been more precisely determined.  相似文献   

2.
The Voyager ultraviolet spectrometer disclosed strong longitude variation in the midlatitude Lyman alpha brightness of Jupiter. Minimum brightness of 16 and 14.4 kR were observed from Voyagers 1 and 2, respectively, with the intensity rising to peaks of 21 and 19.6 kR at a longitude near 110°. Observations of Jovian Lyman alpha, made with the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) beginning in December 1978, and continuing through January 1982, also show a region of persistently enhanced but variable flux near a longitude, λ, of 100°; however, IUE measured brightnesses are consistently lower than those of Voyager. Although the Lyman alpha flux from the “normal” region of the plant between λ 200 and 300° remained nearly constant during the period of the IUE observations, that from the “perturbed” region centered on λ 110° varied by ±25% from the mean. The sources of Lyman alpha flux include resonance scattering of solar and interplanetary Lyman alpha, and excitation by charged particle precipitation. That portion of the dayside flux due to charged particle excitation has been variously estimated at between 2.3 and 7 kR. About 1 kR of the dayside flux is due to resonance scattering of the sky background. It is assumed that H and an absorber (CH4) are distributed above the homopause according to the local height distribution of temperature. The daytime equation of radiative transfer is solved to determine the longitudinal distribution of freely scattering atomic hydrogen that would account for the observed flux. This daytime solution shows that if the hydrogen bulge is the result of localized heating and a consequent increase in scale height, the temperature in the perturbed region must be about 100°K warmer than that in the normal region. The nightside Lyman alpha brightness exhibits a longitude variation very similar to that on the dayside. The H distribution derived from the dayside solution is used with the nightside flux to estimate the longitude variation of particle precipitation on the nightside.  相似文献   

3.
Infrared (1.5–20 μm) observations of the nuclear condensation of Comet IRAS-Araki-Alcock (1983d) during the interval 5–8 May 1983 (UT) show that the distribution of 3.5- to 20-μm radiation was blackbody in character with no evidence of 10-μm emission from silicate grains in the coma of the comet. The observed color temperature of the nuclear condensation of the comet was 319 ± 5°K on 7 May and 307 ± 5°K on 8 May. Low-resolution spectrophotometry on 5 May in the 1.5- to 2.6-μm region shows no obvious emission or absorption features, but thermal radiation of approximately the same color temperature as the 3.5- to 20-μm radiation was present along with reflected sunlight. Scans of the nuclear region of the comet indicate that most of the thermal radiation observed at 11.6 and 20.0 μm came from an ≤120-km-diameter, unresolved area centered on the nuclear region. Absolute flux measurements suggest that projected areas (unit emissivity) of 70 and 40 km2 were responsible for the thermal radiation from the nuclear condensation on 7 and 8 May, respectively. This large change in total surface area suggests that the amount of dust in the nuclear region of Comet 1983d was highly variable and is consistent with the observation by M.A. Feierberg, F.C. Witteborn, J.R. Johnson, and H. Campins (1984, Icarus, 60, 449–454) of an outburst on 11 May 1983.  相似文献   

4.
《Icarus》1987,70(3):506-516
We present 2.7-mm interferometric observations of Saturn made near opposition in June 1984 and June 1985, when the ring opening angle was 19° and 23°, respectively. By combining the data sets we produce brightness maps of Saturn and its rings with a resolution of 6″. The maps show flux from the ring ansae, and are the first direct evidence of ring flux in the 3-mm wavelength region. Modelfits to the visibility data yield a disk brightness temperature of 156 ± 5°K, a combined A, B, and C ring brightness temperature of 19 ± 3°K, and a combined a ring cusp (region of the rings which block the planet's disk) brightness temperature of 85 ± 5°K. These results imply a normal-to-the-ring optical depth for the combined ABC ringof 0.31 ± 0.04, which is nearly the same value found for wavelenghts from the UV to 6 cm. About 6°K of the ring flux is attributed to scattered planetary emission, leaving an intrinsic thermal component of ∼13°K. These results, together with the ring particle size distributions found by the Voyager radio occultation experiments, are consistent with the idea that the ring particles are composed chiefly of water ice.  相似文献   

5.
An extension of the seasonal climate model of R. D. Cess and J. Caldwell (1979, Icarus, 38, 349–357) to Saturn's upper troposphere is presented. The ring-modulated latitudinal dependence of the insolation, the ring thermal emission, the oblateness of the planet, the orbit eccentricity, and the latitudinal variation of the internal heat flux are taken into account. Calculations agree closely with the temperature—latitude profiles retrieved from Voyager IRIS measurements at atmospheric levels located above the 0.2-bar pressure level; they reproduce the observed large-scale hemispheric asymmetry which is then shown to result from the seasonally variable insolation. Aerosol absorption is found to be the dominant source of atmospheric solar heating in the troposphere and the model suggests an aerosol mean unit optical depth around the 0.25-bar level in the equatorial region and around the 0.35-bar level at other latitudes. The model fails to predict the retrieved temperature—latitude profiles below the 0.3-bar level. This discrepancy is attributed to the existence of clouds at these levels which are responsible for an additional far-infrared opacity not taken into account in the temperature retrieval. The cloud-top altitude would be about 0.3 bar except in the 20 to 40°N region where these clouds would be confined below the 0.6-bar level. The poor correlation between infrared measurements and visible images is discussed and a possible model of Saturn's cloud structure is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
The spectral reflectance from 0.38 to 0.75 μm of a column of liquid sulfur has been measured at several temperatures between the melting point (~118°C) and 173°C. Below 160°C the spectral reflectance was observed to vary reversibly as a function of temperature, independent of the previous thermal history of the column. Once the temperature exceeded 160°C, the spectrum would not change given a subsequent decrease in temperature. The spectral reflectance of the liquid-sulfur column at all temperatures was very low (10–19%). Combining this information with Voyager spectrophotometry of Jupiter's satellite Io, it is concluded that liquid sulfur at any temperature on Io's surface would be classified as a “black area” according to the standards used by the Voyager imaging team in their spectrophotometric analysis (L. Soderblom, T. V. Johnson, D. Morrison, E. Danielson, B. L. Smith, J. Veverka, A. Cook, C. Sagan, P. Kupferman, D. Pieri, J. Mosher, C. Avis, J. Gradie, and T. Clancy (1980). Geophys. Res. Lett.7, 963–966).  相似文献   

7.
Recent 3-mm observations of Saturn at low ring inclinations are combined with previous observations of E. E. Epstein, M. A. Janssen, J. N. Cuzzi, W. G. Fogarty, and J. Mottmann (Icarus41, 103–118) to determine a much more precise brightness temperature for Saturn's rings. Allowing for uncertainties in the optical depth and uniformity of the A and B rings and for ambiguities due to the C ring, but assuming the ring brightness to remain approximately constant with inclination, a mean brightness temperature for the A and B rings of 17 ± 4°K was determined. The portion of this brightness attributed to ring particle thermal emission is 11 ± 5°K. The disk temperature of Saturn without the rings would be 156 ± 6°K, relative to B. L. Ulich, J. H. Davis, P. J. Rhodes, and J. M. Hollis' (1980, IEEE Trans. Antennas Propag.AP-28, 367–376) absolutely calibrated disk temperature for Jupiter. Assuming that the ring particles are pure water ice, a simple slab emission model leads to an estimate of typical particle sizes of ≈0.3 m. A multiple-scattering model gives a ring particle effective isotropic single-scattering albedo of 0.85 ± 0.05. This albedo has been compared with theoretical Mie calculations of average albedo for various combinations of particle size distribution and refractive indices. If the maximum particle radius (≈5 m) deduced from Voyager bistatic radar observations (E. A. Marouf, G. L. Tyler, H. A. Zebker, V. R. Eshleman, 1983, Icarus54, 189–211) is correct, our results indicate either (a) a particle distribution between 1 cm and several meters radius of the form r?s with 3.3 ? s ? 3.6, or (b) a material absorption coefficient between 3 and 10 times lower than that of pure water ice Ih at 85°K, or both. Merely decreasing the density of the ice Ih particles by increasing their porosity will not produce the observed particle albedo. The low ring brightness temperature allows an upper limit on the ring particle silicate content of ≈10% by mass if the rocky material is uniformly distributed; however, there could be considerably more silicate material if it is segregated from the icy material.  相似文献   

8.
Full-disk and high-resolution measurements recorded during the Voyager 1 flyby of Saturn by the radiometer of the infrared instrument, IRIS, indicate a geometric albedo of 0.242 ± 0.012, which is lower than previous estimates. The given error is largely due to uncertainties in systematic corrections; random effects are small. Combining this measurement with the Pioneer-derived phase integral yields a Bond albedo of 0.342 ± 0.030. Infrared spectra recorded at the same time by the Michelson interferometer, along with a model extrapolation to wavenumbers not covered by the instrument, yield an effective temperature of 95.0 ± 0.4°K. As in the case of the radiometer, random instrumental errors are small, and the quoted error in the effective temperature reflects primarily uncertainties in systematic corrections. The rings of Saturn significantly affect both the short- and long-wavelength fluxes. From these measurements the internal heat flux of Saturn is 2.01 ± 0.14 10?4W cm?2, and the energy balance, defined as the ratio of total emitted to total absorbed energy, is 1.78 ± 0.09.  相似文献   

9.
We have analysed all the available high phase angle images of Titan limb taken by Voyager 1 and 2, in early 1980. For several different phase angles and wavelengths, we seek for a consistent set of haze parameters able to fit all data simultaneously. Our main purpose is to obtain an accurate estimate of the latitudinal variation of haze opacity at 200 km altitude at the time of the Voyager flyby's. We find that haze opacity at 200 km is about constant in the southern hemisphere and drops between equator and 60°N by about 30-50%, sharply increasing again beyond 60°N. The latter feature is clearly due to the north polarhood.This behaviour is opposite to total optical depth variations retrieved from IRIS observation, at the same epoch. The IRIS data refer to levels below 100 km altitude. A comparison of our results with calculations from a general circulation model, shows that (1) our results are realistic and can be considered as robust (2) the opacity variations at 200 km (this work) and at ground (IRIS data), although opposite, are not inconsistent with each other.  相似文献   

10.
Steven W. Squyres 《Icarus》1980,44(2):502-510
Surface temperatures and ice evaporation rates are calculated for Ganymede and Callisto as a function of latitude, time of day, and albedo. The model uses surface thermal properties determined by eclipse radiometry (Morrison and Cruikshank, 1973Icarus18 224–236) and albedos determined from photometrically decalibrated Voyager images. Daytime temperatures on Callisto are roughly 8°K warmer than those in Ganymede's cratered terrain and 11°K warmer than those in Ganymede's grooved terrain. Diurnal mean ice evaporation rates are high enough on both bodies that the surface material probably consists of a very low density lag deposit of primarily silicate dust overlying a denser regolith of silicates and ice. The difference in temperature between Ganymede and Callisto is not great enough to account for the lack of bright polar caps on Callisto. This lack seems instead to reflect a real deficiency in the amount of available H2O frost relative to Ganymede. The temperature difference between Ganymede's grooved and cratered terrains also cannot account for the strong concentration of bright ray craters in grooved terrain. This concentration suggests instead that an internal geologic process has enriched the grooved terrain in ice relative to the cratered terrain.  相似文献   

11.
A control network of the Saturnian satellite Iapetus has been established photogrammetrically from pictures taken by the two Voyager spacecraft. Coordinates of 62 control points have been computed and listed; pixel measurements of these points were made on 14 Voyager 1 and 66 Voyager 2 pictures. Some of these points are identified on the preliminary U.S. Geological Survey map of Iapetus and many are identified by name. The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 pictures covered limited regions of the satellite's surface and contained no overlapping areas. The longitude system on Iapetus is defined by the crater Almeric; the 276° meridian passes through the center of this crater. The obliquity of Iapetus has been measured as 0°.4 ± 1°.6. The mean radius of Iapetus has been determined as 718 ± 8 km.  相似文献   

12.
Radiation damage and luminescence, caused by magnetospheric charged particles, have been suggested by several authors as mechanisms for explaining some of the peculiar spectral/albedo features of Io. We have pursued this possibility by measuring the uv-visual spectral reflectance and luminescent efficiency of several proposed Io surface constituents during 2 to 10-keV proton irradiation at room temperature and at low temperature (120 < T < 140°K). The spectral reflectance of NaCl and KCl during proton irradiation exhibits the well-known F-center absorption bands at 4580 and 5560 Å. Na2SO4 shows a generalized darkening which increases toward longer wavelengths. NaNO3 shows a spectral reflectance change indicative of the partial alteration of NaNo3 to NaNo2. NaNO2 shows no change. The luminescent efficiencies of NaCl and KCl are ~10?4 at 300°K and increase by one-half order of magnitude at ~130°K. The efficiencies of K2CO3, Na2CO3, Na2SO4, and NaNO3 are 10?4, 10?4, 10?5 and 10?6, respectively, at 300°K and they all decrease by one-half order of magnitude at ~130°K. These results indicate that magnetospheric proton irradiation of Io could cause spectral features in its observed ultraviolet and visible reflection spectrum if salts such as those studied here are present on its surface. However, because the magnitude of these spectral effects is dependent on competing factors such as surface temperature, incident particle energy flux, solar bleaching effects, and trace element abundance, we are unable at this time to make a quantitative estimate of the strength of these spectral effects on Io. The luminescent efficiencies of pure samples that we have studied in the laboratory suggest that charged-particle induced luminescence from Io's surface might be observable by a spacecraft such as Voyager when viewing Io's dark side.  相似文献   

13.
Stephen J. Keihm 《Icarus》1984,60(3):568-589
A detailed model of the lunar regolith is analyzed to examine the feasibility of an orbital mapping of heat flow using microwave radiometers. For regolith thermal and electrical properties which are representative of Apollo findings, brightness temperature observations in the bandλ = 5–30 cm would be required for heat flow analysis. Spectral variations shortward of 5 cm are controlled primarily by the temperature dependencies of the thermal conductivity and electrical absorption within the diurnal-varying layer. For wavelengths longer than 30 cm, unwanted emission from high impedance subregolith layers can be significant and size limitations on spacecraft radiometers is a factor. Over the 5- to 30-cm band, lunation-averaged brightness temperature increases of 2–10°K are predicted for heat flow values representative of the Apollo measurements. The magnitude of this increase depends directly on the value of regolith microwave absorption. For absorption values consistent with Apollo laboratory measurements, a spectral increase of 5°K is predicted. This value is considered marginally sufficient for an orbital heat flow measurement. However, important non-heat flow effects must be accounted for. Spectral variations can occur due to surface topography and subsurface scattering. For nadir viewing, surface roughness effects are not expected to be significant and topographic effects are nearly constant with wavelength for λ > 5cm. Volume scattering due to subsurface rock fragments can cause emission darkening of 1–6°K. However, spectral variations will not be large unless the distribution of scatterer sizes is sharply skewed. For the Moon, the most serious spurious effect appears to be emissivity variations due to the near-surface density gradient. A brightness temperature decrease of 10°K is predicted from centimeter to decameter wavelengths. If the transition from porous surface fines to compacted regolith soil occurs rapidly (within the upper 3–5 cm), most of the emissivity decrease will occur in the 5- to 30-cm wavelength band. It is recommended that complementary radar measurements be utilized to augment constraints on regolith emissivity and scattering properties.  相似文献   

14.
Two classes of volcanic plumes on Io   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Comparison of Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 images of the south polar region of Io has revealed that a major volcanic eruption occured there during the period between the two spacecraft encounters. An annular deposit ~1400 km in diameter formed around the Aten Patera caldera (311°W, 48°S), the floor of which changed from orange to red-black. The characteristics of this eruption are remarkably similar to those described earlier for an eruption centered on Surt caldera (338°W, 45°N) that occured during the same period, also at high latitude, but in the north. Both volcanic centers were evidently inactive during the Voyager 1 and 2 encounters but were active sometime between the two. The geometric and colorimetric characteristics, as well as scale of the two annular deposits, are virtually identical; both resemble the surface features formed by the eruption of Pele (255°W, 18°S). These three very large plume eruptions suggest a class of eruption distinct from that of six smaller plumes observed to be continously active by both Voyagers 1 and 2. The smaller plumes, of which Prometheus is the type example, are longer-lived, deposit bright, whitish material, erupt at velocities of ~0.5 km sec?1, and are concentrated at low latitudes in an equatorial belt around the satellite. The very large Pele-type plumes, on the other hand, are relatively short-lived, deposit darker red materials, erupt at ~1.0 km sec?1, and (rather than restricted to a latitudinal band) are restricted in longitude from 240° to 360°W. Both direct thermal infrared temperature measurements and the implied color temperatures for quenched liquid sulfur suggest that hot spot temperatures of ~650°K are associated with the large plumes and temperatures <400°K with the small plumes. The typical eruption duration of the small plumes is at least several years; that of the large plumes appears to be of the order of days to weeks. The two classes therefore differ by more than two orders of magnitude in duration of eruption. Based on uv, visible, and infrared spectra, the small plumes seem to contain and deposit SO2 in their annuli whereas the large plumes apparently do not. Two other plumes that occur at either end of the linear feature Loki may be intermediate or hybrid between the two classes, exhibiting attributes of both. Additionally, Loki occurs in the area of overlap in the regional distributions of the two plume classes. Two distinct volcanic systems involving different volatiles may be responsible for the two classes. We propose that the discrete temperatures associated with the two classes are a direct reflection of sulfur's peculiar variation in viscosity with temperature. Over two temperature ranges (~400 to 430°K and >650°K), sulfur is a low-viscosity fluid (orange and black, respectively); at other temperatures it is either solid or has a high viscosity. As a result, there will be two zones in Io's crust in which liquid sulfur will flow freely: a shallow zone of orange sulfur and a deeper zone of black sulfur. A low-temperature system driven by SO2 heated to 400 to 400°K by the orange sulfur zone seems the best model for the small plumes; a system driven by sulfur heated to >650°K by hot or even molten silicates in the black sulfur zone seems the best explanation for the large plume class. The large Pele-type plumes are apparently concentrated in a region of the satellite in which a thinner sulfur-rich crust overlies the tidally heated silicate lithosphere, so the black sulfur zone may be fairly shallow in this region. The Prometheus-type plumes are possibly confined to the equatorial belt by some process that concentrates SO2 fluid in the equatorial crust.  相似文献   

15.
16.
A radiative seasonal model which incorporates a multilayer radiative transfer treatment at wave-lengths longward of 7 μm is presented and applied to Saturn's stratosphere. Opacities due to H2-He, CH4, C2H2, and C2H6 are included. Season-dependent insolation is shown to produce a strong hemispheric asymmetry decreasing with depth at the Voyager encounter times, and seasonal amplitudes of 30°K at the poles are predicted in the high stratosphere. The ring-modulated dependence of the insolation and the orbital eccentricity are shown to have a significant effect. Calculations agree closely with the Voyager 1 and 2 radio occultation ingress profiles recorded at 76°S and 36.5°S for CH4/H2 = 3.5 + 1.4/? 1.0 × 10?3;the estimated errors include modeling systematic errors and uncertainties in the occultations profiles. The possible role of aerosols in the stratospheric heating is analyzed. The Voyager 2 egress profile recorded at 31°S cannot be reproduced by calculations. Some constraints on the C2H2 and C2H6 abundances are derived. The upper portion of the occultation profiles (p < 3mbar) can be matched for C2H2/H2 = 1.0 + 1.3/?0.6 × 10?7, C2H6/H2 = 1.5 + 1.8/?0.9 × 10?6 at 76°S and C2H2/H2 = 4 + 6/?4 × 10?8, C2H6/H2 = 6 + 9/?6 × 10?7 at 36.5°N. At the northern occultation latitude, the discrepancy with the concentrations derived from analysis of IRIS spectra by R. Courtin, D. Gautier, A. Marten, B. Bézard, and R. Hanel (1984, Astrophys. J.287) can be explained by a sharp variation of the mixing ratios of these gases with altitude in the upper stratosphere. Other interpretations are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
R.E. Danielson 《Icarus》1977,30(3):462-478
Models of the interior of Uranus (Podolak, 1976) suggest that the abundances of such substances as CH4 are greatly enhanced with respect to solar abundances of heavy elements. Such enhancement leads to a new type of model atmosphere for Uranus, which agrees with observation if the internal energy flux is small (?10%) compared with the absorbed solar energy. An important feature of the models is the presence of a cloud of CH4 droplets whose top is at a temperature of ?90°K and a pressure of ?4atm. Above the cloud, the atmosphere is stable because of the rapid decrease of the thermal flux with depth. Being saturated, most of the observable gaseous CH4 is near the cloud; the CH4 abundance above the cloud, of the order of 5 km-am, is a very sensitive function of the cloud-top temperature.  相似文献   

18.
Bézard B  Coustenis A  McKay CP 《Icarus》1995,113(2):267-276
During the 1981 Voyager encounter, Titan's stratosphere exhibited a large thermal asymmetry, with high northern latitudes being colder than comparable southern latitudes. Given the short radiative time constant, this asymmetry would not be expected at the season of the Voyager observations (spring equinox), if the infrared and solar opacity sources were distributed symmetrically. We have investigated the radiative budget of Titan's stratosphere, using two selections of Voyager IRIS spectra recorded at symmetric northern and southern latitudes. In the region 0.1-1 mbar, temperatures are 7 K colder at 50 degrees N than at 53 degrees S and the difference reaches approximately 13 K at 5 mbar. On the other hand, the northern region is strongly enriched in nitriles and hydrocarbons, and the haze optical depth derived from the continuum emission between 8 and 15 micrometers is twice as large as in the south. Cooling rate profiles have been computed at the two locations, using the gas and haze abundances derived from the IRIS measurements. We find that, despite lower temperatures, the cooling rate profiles in the pressure range 0.15-5 mbar are 20 to 40% larger in the north than in the south, because of the enhanced concentrations of infrared radiators. Because the northern hemisphere appears darker than the southern one in the Voyager images, enhanced solar heating is also expected to take place at 50 degrees N. Solar heating rate profiles have been calculated, with two different assumptions on the origin of the hemispheric asymmetry. In the most likely case where it results from a variation in the absorbance of the haze material, the heating rates are found to be 12-15% larger at the northern location than at the southern one, a smaller increase than that in the cooling rates. If the lower albedo in the north results from an increase in the particle number density, a 55 to 75% difference is found for the pressure range 0.15-5 mbar, thus larger than that calculated for the cooling rates. Considering the uncertainties in the haze model, dynamical heat transport may significantly contribute to the meridional temperature gradients observed in the stratosphere. On the other hand, the latitudinal variation in gas and haze composition may be sufficient to explain the entire temperature asymmetry observed, without invoking a lag in the thermal response of the atmosphere due to dynamical inertia.  相似文献   

19.
We reduced ultraviolet spectra of Saturn from the IUE satellite to produce a geometric albedo of the planet from 1500 to 3000 Å. By matching computer models to the albedo we determined a chemical composition consistent with the data. This model includes C2H2 and C2H6 with mixing ratios and distributions of (9 ± 3) × 10?8 in the top 20 mbar of the atmosphere with none below for C2H2 and (6 ± 1) × 10?6 also in the top 20 mbar with none below for C2H6. The C2H2 and C2H6 distributions and the C2H6 mixing ratio are taken directly from the Voyager IRIS model [R. Courtin et al., Bull. Amer. Astron. Soc.13, 722 (1981), and private communication]. The Voyager IRIS model also includes PH3, which is not consistent with the uv albedo from 1800 to 2400 Å. Our model requires a previously unidentified absorber to explain the albedo near 1600 Å. After considering several candidates, we find that the best fit to the data is obtained with H2O, having a column density of (6 ± 1) × 10?3 cm-am.  相似文献   

20.
Saturn atmospheric temperatures at the 150-mbar level retrieved from Voyager IRIS measurements indicate the presence of small-scale meridional gradients which are approximately symmetric with respect to the equator, but are superposed on a large-scale hemispheric thermal asymmetry. Under the assumption that the retrieved values at this atmospheric level represent kinetic temperatures on a constant pressure surface, it is suggested that the small-scale structure is produced by a meriodional circulation associated with the dissipative decay of the zonal winds with height, while the hemispheric asymmetry represents a thermal response to the seasonally varying insolation. The small-scale gradients are correlated with zonal winds derived from Voyager images at mid and high latitudes through the thermal wind relation; the calculated thermal wind shears suggest a decay with height of the jet system toward a state of uniform eatward flow. The existence of the approximately symmetric zonal winds and associated temperature gradients in the presence of a large-scale seasonal thermal response suggests that the jet system is driven at depths substantially below the levels where seasonally modulated insolation is important (p?0.5 bar).  相似文献   

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