posted on 2018-01-05, 14:25authored byLeigh N. Fletcher, Magnus Gustafsson, Glenn S. Orton
Despite being one of the weakest dimers in nature, low-spectral-resolution Voyager/IRIS observations revealed the presence
of (H2)2 dimers on Jupiter and Saturn in the 1980s. However, the collision-induced H2-H2 opacity databases widely used in
planetary science (Borysow et al. 1985; Orton et al. 2007; Richard et al. 2012) have thus far only included free-to-free transitions
and have neglected the contributions of dimers. Dimer spectra have both fine-scale structure near the S(0) and S(1) quadrupole
lines (354 and 587 cm−1
, respectively), and broad continuum absorption contributions up to ±50 cm−1
from the line centres.
We develop a new ab initio model for the free-to-bound, bound-to-free and bound-to-bound transitions of the hydrogen dimer
for a range of temperatures (40-400 K) and para-hydrogen fractions (0.25-1.0). The model is validated against low-temperature
laboratory experiments, and used to simulate the spectra of the giant planets. The new collision-induced opacity database permits
high-resolution (0.5-1.0 cm−1
) spectral modelling of dimer spectra near S(0) and S(1) in both Cassini Composite Infrared
Spectrometer (CIRS) observations of Jupiter and Saturn, and in Spitzer Infrared Spectrometer (IRS) observations of Uranus and
Neptune for the first time. Furthermore, the model reproduces the dimer signatures observed in Voyager/IRIS data near S(0)
(McKellar 1984) on Jupiter and Saturn, and generally lowers the amount of para-H2 (and the extent of disequilibrium) required
to reproduce IRIS observations.
Funding
Fletcher was supported by a Royal Society Research Fellowship
and European Research Council Consolidator Grant
(under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation
programme, grant agreement No 723890) at the
University of Leicester. Gustafsson acknowledges support
from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. Orton
was supported by funding from the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California
Institute of Technology.
Facilities: Cassini, Spitzer, Voyager
History
Citation
Astrophysical Journal Supplement, 2018, 235(24)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
The new free-to-free, freeto-bound,
bound-to-free and bound-to-bound opacity tables
are all available at the following address: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1095503.