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Abundances of Jupiter's trace hydrocarbons from Voyager and Cassini

Abstract:
The flybys of Jupiter by the Voyager spacecraft in 1979, and over two decades later by Cassini in 2000, have provided us with unique datasets from two different epochs, allowing the investigation of seasonal change in the atmosphere. In this paper we model zonal averages of thermal infrared spectra from the two instruments, Voyager 1 IRIS and Cassini CIRS, to retrieve the vertical and meridional profiles of temperature, and the abundances of the two minor hydrocarbons, acetylene (C2H2) and ethane (C2H6). The spatial variation of these gases is controlled by both chemistry and dynamics, and therefore their observed distribution gives us an insight into both processes. We find that the two gases paint quite different pictures of seasonal change. Whilst the 2-D cross-section of C2H6 abundance is slightly increased and more symmetric in 2000 (northern summer solstice) compared to 1979 (northern fall equinox), the major trend of equator to pole increase remains. For C2H2 on the other hand, the Voyager epoch exhibits almost no latitudinal variation, whilst the Cassini era shows a marked decrease polewards in both hemispheres. At the present time, these experimental findings are in advance of interpretation, as there are no published models of 2-D Jovian seasonal chemical variation available for comparison.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.pss.2010.05.008

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Publisher:
Elsevier
Journal:
Planetary and Space Science More from this journal
Volume:
58
Issue:
13
Pages:
1667–1680
Publication date:
2010-05-24
Acceptance date:
2010-05-15
DOI:


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:499751
UUID:
uuid:509ec12f-676b-4e34-8e12-ffa9b7cf262b
Local pid:
pubs:499751
Source identifiers:
499751
Deposit date:
2014-12-23

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