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1.
Multiaperture K photometry and 2.0- to 2.5-μm spectrophotometry of Uranus and its ring system are presented. The photometric results are used, together with a previously published measurement, to set limits on the geometric albedos of Uranus and the rings at ~2.2 μm: (0.74 ± 0.02) × 10(su?4) ≤ pK (Uranus) ≤ (1.5 ± 0.3) × 10?4, and (2.7 ± 0.6) × 10?2pK (rings) ≤ (3.4 ± 0.1) × 10?2. Reflectance spectra of Uranus and Uranus plus rings show features in the planet's spectrum which are attributed to gaseous CH4 absorption, and a 2.20-μm feature in the combined spectrum which may be due to the rings. This feature is tentatively identified with either the 2.26-μm absorption feature of NH3 frost, or the 2.2-μm OH band exhibited by certain silicate minerals. The results of JHK photometry of Uranus' satellite, Ariel (U1), indicate that the infrared colors of this object are very similar to those of the satellites U2, U3, and U4.  相似文献   

2.
Stratospheric temperature profiles of Uranus were derived from the stellar occultation of 22 April 1982 in the pressure range 5–30 μbar. The observations were made at the European Southern Observatory, Chile, and at the Observatoire du Pic du Midi et de Toulouse, France with two telescopes in both sites. The study of these profiles confirms that Uranus' stratosphere is warmer than had been expected from radiative models (J. F. Appleby, 1980, Atmospheric Structures of the Giant Planets from Radiative-Convective Equilibrium Models. PhD. Thesis, State University of New York at Stony Brook) and that there has been a general increase of temperature since 1977 (R. G. French, J. L. Elliot, E. W. Dunham, D. A. Allen, J. H. Elias, J. A. Frogel, and W. Liller, 1983, Icarus53, 399–414). Furthermore, the profiles exhibit a nonisothermal feature with a maximum temperature around the 8-μbar pressure level. The amplitude of this feature increases linearly with the diurnally averaged insolation 〈D〉 up to the observed value 〈D〉 ~ 0.15. Moreover, the temperature at 8 μbar, as well as the mean stratospheric temperature, reaches a plateau around the equator of the planet which is far from maximum insolation. For a nominal abundance of methane ηCH4 ~ 3 × 10?5 and normal incidence, the UV absorption could compete with the IR methane absorption bands at the pressure level 8 μbar. However, the high temperatures observed even at grazing incidence imply important circulation phenomena to isothermalize distant regions of the planet. Alternatively, the observed profiles may suggest that an optically thin aerosol layer distributed over one scale height is responsible for the temperature maximum at 8 μbar. The total mass of dust necessary to heat this region up significantly would be a small fraction (6 × 1010 g vs 5 × 1018 g) of the Uranian ring system, which appears then as a possible reservoir of dust. However, a falling rate of ~1 msec?1 would deplete the rings in a short time (≈2 × 105 years) so that a dynamical process is needed to sustain the aerosol layer.  相似文献   

3.
Photochemical calculations for Uranus predict an extensive region of condensation of acetylene, ethane and methane in the vicinity of the temperature inversion layer. This could explain why ethane was not detected on Uranus, unlike Neptune which has a much warmer inversion layer. Subsequent snow-out of the condensibles is expected to result in reduced visibility in the troposphere. Ionospheric calculations for the equatorial region to be probed by Voyager, indicate peak electron concentrations on the order of 5×103 cm?3, if dynamical effects are important. Upper limit to the electron peak is 3×104 cm?3. Exospheric temperatures as high as 200–250K are conceivable.  相似文献   

4.
We observed Saturn at far-infrared and submillimeter wavelengths during the Earth's March 1980 passage through the plane of Saturn's rings. Comparison with earlier spectroscopic observations by D. B. Ward [Icarus32, 437–442 (1977)], obtained at a time when the tilt angle of the rings was 21.8°, permits separation of the disk and ring contributions to the flux observed in this wavelength range. We present two main results: (1) The observed emission of the disk between 60 and 180 μm corresponds to a brightness temperature of 104 ± 2°K; (2) the brightness temperature of the rings drops approximately 20°K between 60 and 80 μm. Our data, in conjunction with the data obtained by other observers between 1 μm and 1 mm, permit us to derive an improved estimate for the total Saturnian surface brightness of (4.84 ± 0.32) × 10?4W cm?2 corresponding to an effective temperature of 96.1 ± 1.6°K. The ratio of radiated to incident power, PR/PI, is (1.46 ± 0.08)/(1 - A), where A is the Bond albedo. For A = 0.337 ± 0.029, PR/PI = 2.20 ± 0.15 and Saturn's intrinsic luminosity is LS = (2.9 ± 0.5) × 10?10L.  相似文献   

5.
We present adaptive optic images of Uranus obtained with the 10-m W. M. Keck II telescope in June 2000, at wavelengths between 1 and 2.4 μm. The angular resolution of the images is ∼0.06-0.09″. We identified eight small cloud features on Uranus's disk, four of which were in the northern hemisphere. The latter features are ∼1000-2000 km in extent and located in the upper troposphere, above the methane cloud, at pressures between 0.5 and 1 bar. Our data have been combined with HST data by Hammel et al. (2001, Icarus153, 229-235); the combination of Keck and HST data allowed derivation of an accurate wind velocity profile. Our images further show Uranus's entire ring system: the asymmetric ? ring, as well as the three groups of inner rings (outward from Uranus): the rings 6+5+4, α+β, and the η+γ+δ rings. We derived the equivalent I/F width and ring particle reflectivity for each group of rings. Typical particle albedos are ∼0.04-0.05, in good agreement with HST data at 0.9 μm.  相似文献   

6.
The spectrum of Saturn was measured from 80 to 350 cm?1 (29 to 125 μm) with ≈6-cm?1 resolution using a Michelson interferometer aboard NASA's Kuiper Airborne Observatory. These observations are of the full disk, with little contribution from the rings. For frequencies below 300 cm?1, Saturn's brightness temperature rises slowly, reaching ≈111°K at 100 cm?1. The effective temperature is 96.8 ± 2.5°K, implying that Saturn emits 3.0 ± 0.5 times as much energy as it receives from the Sun. The rotation-inversion manifolds of NH3 that are prominent in the far-infrared spectrum of Jupiter are not observed on Saturn. Our models predict the strengths to be only ≈2 to 5°K in brightness temperature because most of the NH3 is frozen out; this is comparable to the noise in our data. By combining our data with those of an earlier investigation when the Saturnicentric latitude of the Sun was B′ = 21.2°, we obtain the spectrum of the rings. The high-frequency end of the ring spectrum (ν > 230 cm?1) has nearly constant brightness temperature of 85°K. At lower frequencies, the brightness temperature decreases roughly as predicted by a simple absorption model with an optical depth proportional to ν1.5. This behavior could be due to mu-structure on the surface of the ring particles with a scale size of 10 to 100 μm and/or to impurities in their composition.  相似文献   

7.
We present 20-μm photometry of Uranus and Neptune which confirms the presence of a temperature inversion in the lower stratospheres in both planets. We find the brightness temperature difference between 17.8 and 19.6 μm to be 0.8 ± 0.5°K for Uranus and 1.8 ± 0.6°K for Neptune. These results indicate that the temperature inversions on both planets are weaker than previously thought. Comparison to model atmospheres by J. Appleby [Ph.D. thesis, SUNY at Stony Brook 1980] indicates that the temperature inversions can be understood as arising from heating by the absorption of sunlight by CH4 and aerosols. However, the stratospheric CH4 mixing ratio on Neptune must be higher than that at the temperature minimum.  相似文献   

8.
We present far-infrared observations of Saturn in the wavelength band 76–116 μm, using a balloon-borne 75-cm telescope launched on 10 December 1980 from Hyderabad, India, when B′, the Saturnicentric latitude of the Sun, was 4°.3. Normalizing with respect to Jupiter, we find the average brightness temperature of the disk-ring system to be 90 ± 3° K. Correcting for the contribution from rings using experimental information on the brightness temperature of rings at 20 μm, we find TD, the brightness temperature of the disk, to be 96.9 ± 3.5° K. The systematic errors and the correction for the ring contribution are small for our observations. We, therefore, make use of our estimate of TD and earlier observations of Saturn when contribution from the rings was large and find that for wavelengths greater than 50 μm, there is a small reduction in the ring brightness temperature as compared to that at 20 μm.  相似文献   

9.
L. Wallace 《Icarus》1975,25(4):538-544
Uranus has an effective temperature close to the solar equilibrium value and undoubtedly a thermal inversion of at least 140 K at a pressure of ~3 dyncm?2. With the inversion and the thermal opacity provided by a HeH2 mixture in a ratio close to solar abundance, acceptable agreement can be achieved with the available infrared observations. The cause of the inversion is, however, uncertain. The use of the HeH2 opacity for Uranus is justified by the excellent agreement of the frequency variation of that opacity with the thermal spectrum of Jupiter.  相似文献   

10.
Observations of the 15 August 1980 Uranus occultation of KM 12, obtained from Cerro Tololo InterAmerican Observatory, European Southern Observatory, and Cerro Las Campanas Observatory, are used to compare the atmospheric structure at points separated by ~140 km along the planetary limb. The results reveal striking, but by no means perfect, correlation of the light curves, ruling out isotropic turbulence as the cause of the light curve spikes. The atmosphere is strongly layered, and any acceptable turbulence model must accommodate the axial ratios of ?60 which are observed. The mean temperature of the atmosphere is 150 ± 15°K for the region near number density 1014 cm?3. Derived temperature variations of vertical scale ~ 130km and amplitude ±5°K are in agreement for all stations, and correlated spikes correspond to low-amplitude temperature variations with a vertical scale of several kilometers.  相似文献   

11.
Observations of the 24 May 1981 occultation of an uncatalogued star by Neptune made at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory have been analyzed to yield temperature profiles of Neptune's upper atmosphere for number densities near 5 × 1013 cm?3. The mean temperatures at immersion (latitude ?56°) and emersion (latitude ?16°) obtained by numerical inversion were 140 ± 10°K and 154 ± 10°K, respectively. The immersion and emersion profiles are remarkably similar in overall shape, suggestive of global atmospheric layering. From the astrometry of the event, precise relative positions of Neptune and the occulted were obtained.  相似文献   

12.
Uwe Fink  Harold P. Larson 《Icarus》1975,24(4):411-420
Reflection spectra of water ice from 1 to 4 μm are presented as a function of temperature. It is found that a feature at 6056 cm?1 changes its intensity sufficiently that it can be used as a spectroscopic measure of the ice temperature. A temperature calibration curve of this feature down to 55 K is developed and is used to determine ice temperatures for the Galilean satellites Europa (95±10 K), Ganymede (103±10 K), and the rings of Saturn (80±5 K). The ice temperatures for the Galilean satellites are lower than their measured brightness temperatures, which can be explained by a higher albedo of the ice covered regions relative to the rest of the satellite and possibly a concentration of the ice near the polar caps.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
New broadband observations in several passbands between 30 and 500 μm of Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus are presented. The best agreement between the data and various thermal models of Mars, Jupiter, and Uranus is obtained with a slightly cooler absolute temperature scale than that previously adopted by Armstrong et al. (1972). The effective temperature of Uranus is 58 ± 2°K, which is in agreement with its solar equilibrium temperature. The existence of an internal energy source of Saturn has been reconfirmed and must lie within the range of 0.9 to 3.2 times the absorbed solar flux. A depression exists in the spectra of Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus between 80 and 300 μm, which may be a result of NH3 opacity.  相似文献   

15.
Jack J. Lissauer 《Icarus》1985,62(3):433-447
The surface mass density profiles at four locations within Saturn's rings are calculated using Voyager spacecraft images of spiral bending waves. Bending waves are vertical corrugations in Saturn's rings which are excited at vertical resonances of a moon, e.g., Mimas, whose orbit is inclined with respect to the mean plane of the rings. Bending waves propagate toward Saturn by virtue of the rings' self-gravity; their wavelength depends on the local surface mass density of the rings. Observations of bending waves can thus be used to determine the surface density in regions of Saturn's rings near vertical resonances. The average surface density of the outer B ring near Mimas' 4:2 inner vertical resonance is 54 ± 10 g cm?2. Surface density in this region probably varies by ~ 30% over radial length scales of tens of kilometers; and irregular radial structure is present on similar length scales in this region. Surface densities ranging from 24 g cm?2 to 45 g cm?2 are found in the A ring. Small scale variations in surface density are not seen in the A ring, consistent with its more uniform optical appearance.  相似文献   

16.
F.H. Briggs  B.H. Andrew 《Icarus》1980,41(2):269-277
We present high-resolution interferometry of Uranus at 6 cm wavelength and single-dish observations of the disk-averaged brightness temperature, TB, at 2.8 and 4.8 cm wavelength. The 1978 measurements of TB of 228 ± 2,243 ± 9, and 259 ± 4 K at 2.8, 4.8, and 6 cm, respectively, support the finding of M. J. Klein and J. A. Turegano (1978, Astrophy. J.224, L31–L34) that the brightness temperature of Uranus has been rising. There is no evidence for radio emission from outside the visible disk at 6 cm. Radiation from a synchrotron radiation belt or from the Uranian rings is certainly less than 10% of the total radio flux. The interferometry shows a possible 55 ± 20 K difference in brightness temperature between the equator and the currently exposed pole. The pole appears to be ~275 K while the equator is ~220 K. However, a permanent gradient of this magnitude is insufficient to account for the rise in disk-averaged brightness by simple reorientation of Uranus' globe relative to our line of sight. The changing insolation probably triggers a redistribution of the trace constituent NH3 which is responsible for the radio opacity. The NH3 may be interacting strongly with H2S on Uranus.  相似文献   

17.
From our telescopic observations of Saturn's rings in 1966, 1979, and 1980, the luminance of the unlit face at λ = 0.58 μm is derived as a function of the height B′ of the Sun above the lit face. A maximum is reached at B′ = 1.9° and a decrease is observed for larger values of B′. Ring B is 1.8 time less bright than ring A and Cassini division. The unlit/lit luminances ratios for the two rings merged together is 8% at B′ = 1.0° and 3% at B′ = 2.8°. The larger value at more grazing incidence is related to the photometric “opposition effect” which reflects more of the incident light backward into the ring plane when the height of the sun is small; the light so reflected is again reflected and scattered and a certain flux reaches the unlit face to escape toward the observer. The unlit face luminances for blue and for yellow light indicate a contribution by micron size particles. The Saturn globe produces a ring illumination which, observed from the Earth, amounts to 1.8 × 10?3 of the disk center reflectance. The rings observed exactly edge-on do not disappear but a faint lineament remains, which produces a flux of (0.30 ± 0.15) 10?3 times the brightness of a segment of 1 arcsec width at Saturn disk center; illuminations of rings' borders or particles outside the exact ring plane are indicated.  相似文献   

18.
Stellar ultraviolet light near 2500 Å is attenuated in the Earth's upper atmosphere due to strong absorption in the Hartley continuum of ozone. The intensity of stars in the Hartley continuum region has been monitored by the University of Wisconsin stellar photometers aboard the OAO-2 satellite during occultation of the star by the Earth's atmosphere. These data have been used to determine the ozone number density profile at the occultation tangent point. The results of approximately 12 stellar occultations, obtained in low latitudes, are presented, giving the nighttime vertical number density profile of ozone in the 60- to 100-km region. The nighttime ozone number density has a bulge in its vertical profile with a peak of 1 to 2×108 cm?3 at approximately 83 km and a minimum near 75 km. The shape of the bulge in the ozone number density profile shows considerable variability with no apparent seasonal or solar cycle change. The ozone profiles obtained during a geomagnetic storm showed little variation at low latitudes.  相似文献   

19.
The theoretical disk brightness temperature spectra for Uranus are computed and compared with the observed microwave spectrum. It is shown that the emission observed at short centimeter wavelengths originates deep below the region where ammonia would ordinarily begin to condense. We demonstrate that this result is inconsistent with a wide range of atmospheric models in which the partial pressure of NH3 is given by the vapor-pressure equation in the upper atmosphere. It is estimated that the ammonia mixing ratio must be less than 10?6 in the 150 to 200°K temperature range. This is two orders of magnitude less than the expected mixing ratio based on solar abundances. The evidence for this depletion and a possible explanation are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Dale W. Smith 《Icarus》1980,44(1):116-133
The Galilean satellite eclipse technique for measuring the aerosol distribution in the Jovian lower stratosphere and upper troposphere is described and applied using 30 color observations of 12 natural satellite eclipses obtained with the 200-in Hale telescope. These events probe the North and South Polar Regions, the North Temperate Belt, the South Equatorial Belt, the South Tropical Zone, the South Temperate Zone, and the Great Red Spot. Aerosol is found above the visible cloud tops in all locations. It is very tenuous and varies with altitude, increasing rapidly with downward passage through the tropopause. The aerosol extinction coefficient at 1.05 μm is 1.0 ± 0.05 × 10?8 cm?1 at the tropopause and the mass density is a few times 10?13 g cm?3. The observations require some aerosol above the tropopause but do not clearly determine its structure. The present analysis emphasizes an extended haze distribution, but the alternate possibility that the stratospheric aerosol resides in a thin layer is not excluded. The vertical aerosol optical depth above the tropopause at 1.05 μm exceeds 0.04 in the NPR, SPR, NTB, SEB, and StrZ, is ~0.006 ± 0.003 in the STZ, and is ~ 0.003 ± 0.001 above the GRS. The aerosol extinction increases with decreasing wavelength in the STZ and NTB and indicates a particle radius of 0.2–0.5 μm; a radius of ~0.9 μm is indicated in the STrZ.  相似文献   

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