Jupiter's
Stratospheric Temperature Variations
Preliminary results show Jupiter
exhibits latitudinal and longitudinal temperature variations in it's
stratosphere. Methane emission lines at
8.11 microns were observed on February 1‑4, 2001 on the IRTF
withTEXES, the Texas Echelon Cross-dispersed Echelle Spectrograph, with a
resolving power of 100,000. Used in
scanning mode we mapped Jupiter's northern hemisphere. The individual spectra were modeled using a
radiative transfer code allowing us to retrieve stratospheric
temperatures. To date, we have found a
maximum thermal variation of 6 +/- 2 K between different non-auroral positions
on Jupiter.
Acetylene and ethane are
photochemical products of methane photolysis and are the dominant coolants in
Jupiter's stratosphere (Yelle, R.V., C.A. Griffith, and L.A. Young 2001. Structure of the jovian stratosphere at the
Galileo Probe entry site. Icarus 152,
331-346.). Currently, we are using the
thermal profiles derived from the methane maps to model the acetylene and
ethane maps taken on the same run. This
allows us to test if spatial variations in acetylene and ethane line emission
are due to abundance variations, to differences in temperature, or a
combination of both. We will then have
a map of the acetylene and ethane abundances that are not compromised by
uncertainties in temperatures.
This figure shows an observed
Jupiter spectrum (in green) over plotted by a best fit model used to constrain
the temperature (in red). The data is
representative of one spectral setting and one spatial position for the TEXES
spectrometer used in scan mode covering the wavelength region of 8.10 to 8.16
microns (1225.5 to 1234.5 wavenumbers [cm-1]).
This study is being carried out by Tommy Greathouse, a graduate student
at the University of Texas.