4.7 Article

Mid-infrared ethane emission on neptune and uranus

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 644, Issue 2, Pages 1326-1333

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/503599

Keywords

infrared : solar system; planets and satellites : individual (Neptune, Uranus)

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We report 8 - 13 mu m spectral observations of Neptune and Uranus from the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility spanning more than a decade. The spectroscopic data indicate a steady increase in Neptune's mean atmospheric 12 mu m ethane emission from 1985 to 2003, followed by a slight decrease in 2004. The simplest explanation for the intensity variation is an increase in stratospheric effective temperature from 155 +/- 3 K in 1985 to 176 +/- 3 K in 2003 ( an average rate of 1.2 K yr(-1)) and a subsequent decrease to 165 +/- 3 K in 2004. We also detected variation of the overall spectral structure of the ethane band, specifically an apparent absorption structure in the central portion of the band; this structure arises from coarse spectral sampling coupled with a nonuniform response function within the detector elements. We also report a probable direct detection of ethane emission on Uranus. The deduced peak mole fraction is approximately 1 order of magnitude higher than previous upper limits for Uranus. The model fit suggests an effective temperature of 114 +/- 3 K for the globally averaged stratosphere of Uranus, which is consistent with recent measurements indicative of seasonal variation.

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