4.5 Article

Saturn's tropospheric composition and clouds from Cassini/VIMS 4.6-5.1 μm nightside spectroscopy

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 214, Issue 2, Pages 510-533

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2011.06.006

Keywords

Saturn; Atmospheres, Composition; Atmospheres, Structure

Funding

  1. University of Oxford
  2. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council
  3. NASA
  4. Cassini Project
  5. STFC [ST/I001948/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  6. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/I001948/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. UK Space Agency [ST/J002755/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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The latitudinal variation of Saturn's tropospheric composition (NH3, PH3 and AsH3) and aerosol properties (cloud altitudes and opacities) are derived from Cassini/VIMS 4.6-5.1 mu m thermal emission spectroscopy on the planet's nightside (April 22, 2006). The gaseous and aerosol distributions are used to trace atmospheric circulation and chemistry within and below Saturn's cloud decks (in the 1- to 4-bar region). Extensive testing of VIMS spectral models is used to assess and minimise the effects of degeneracies between retrieved variables and sensitivity to the choice of aerosol properties. Best fits indicate cloud opacity in two regimes: (a) a compact cloud deck centred in the 2.5-2.8 bar region, symmetric between the northern and southern hemispheres, with small-scale opacity variations responsible for numerous narrow light/dark axisymmetric lanes; and (b) a hemispherically asymmetric population of aerosols at pressures less than 1.4 bar (whose exact altitude and vertical structure is not constrained by nightside spectra) which is 1.5-2.0x more opaque in the summer hemisphere than in the north and shows an equatorial maximum between +/- 10 degrees (planetocentric). Saturn's NH3 spatial variability shows significant enhancement by vertical advection within +/- 5 degrees of the equator and in axisymmetric bands at 23-25 degrees S and 42-47 degrees N. The latter is consistent with extratropical upwelling in a dark band on the poleward side of the prograde jet at 41 degrees N (planetocentric). PH3 dominates the morphology of the VIMS spectrum, and high-altitude PH3 at p < 1.3 bar has an equatorial maximum and a mid-latitude asymmetry (elevated in the summer hemisphere), whereas deep PH3 is latitudinally-uniform with off-equatorial maxima near +/- 10 degrees. The spatial distribution of AsH3 shows similar off-equatorial maxima at +/- 7 degrees with a global abundance of 2-3 ppb. VIMS appears to be sensitive to both (i) an upper tropospheric circulation (sensed by NH3 and upper-tropospheric PH3 and hazes) and (ii) a lower tropospheric circulation (sensed by deep PH3, AsH3 and the lower cloud deck). (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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