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Clouds and Ammonia in the Atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn Determined From a Band‐Depth Analysis of VLT/MUSE Observations

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posted on 2025-03-07, 10:04 authored by Patrick GJ Irwin, Steven M Hill, Leigh FletcherLeigh Fletcher, Charlotte Alexander, John H Rogers

The visible spectrum of Jupiter contains absorption bands of methane (619 nm) and ammonia (647 nm) that can be used to probe the cloud‐top pressures and ammonia abundance in Jupiter's atmosphere. Recently, it has been shown that filter‐averaged observations of Jupiter made with telescopes and filters accessible to backyard astronomers can be reduced to yield ammonia maps that bear a remarkable similarity with distributions derived using more complex radiative transfer methods. Here, we determine the reliability of this method by applying it to observations made with the MUSE instrument at ESO's Very Large Telescope, and find excellent correspondence with the retrieved products from multiple‐scattering retrieval model analyses. We find that the main level of reflection in Jupiter's atmosphere is at 2–3 bar, which is far beneath the anticipated ammonia ice condensation level at 0.7 bar, and conclude that pure ammonia ice cannot be the main cloud constituent. We show that the spatial variations of ammonia determined at 2–3 bar are strongly correlated with those determined from thermal‐infrared observations, and microwave observations by the Very Large Array and the Juno spacecraft. Finally, we show that the same technique can be applied to observations of Saturn, again yielding maps of ammonia abundance at 2–3 bar that are well‐correlated with thermal‐IR observations made near 5 m by Cassini/VIMS and JWST/MIRI. Similarly, the main level of reflectivity is found to be lie far beneath the expected condensation level of ammonia in Saturn's atmosphere at 1.8 bar.

Funding

Planetary Science at Oxford Physics 2019

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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A Consolidated Grant Proposal for Solar and Planetary Science at the University of Leicester, 2022 - 2025

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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History

Citation

Irwin, P. G. J., Hill, S. M., Fletcher, L. N., Alexander, C., & Rogers, J. H. (2025). Clouds and ammonia in the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn determined from a band-depth analysis of VLT/MUSE observations. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 130, e2024JE008622. https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JE008622

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets

Volume

130

Issue

1

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

2169-9097

eissn

2169-9100

Acceptance date

2024-12-11

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-03-07

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Leigh Fletcher

Deposit date

2025-01-13

Data Access Statement

The smoothed and projected VLT/MUSE data sets studied in this paper are available at Irwin (2024b). These data were recorded under ESO programmes: 0104.C-0136 (Jupiter) and 298.C-5050 (Saturn). Data files associated with this analysis are available at Irwin (2024a). The spectral fitting and retrievals were performed using the NEMESIS radiative transfer and retrieval algorithm Irwin et al. (2008) and can be downloaded from Irwin et al. (2022b) (or https://github.com/nemesiscode/radtrancode), with supporting website information at Irwin et al. (2022a) (or https://github.com/nemesiscode/nemesiscode.github.io).

Rights Retention Statement

  • Yes

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