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Saturn's Atmosphere in Northern Summer Revealed by JWST/MIRI

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posted on 2023-10-10, 08:42 authored by LN Fletcher, ORT King, J Harkett, HB Hammel, MT Roman, H Melin, MM Hedman, JI Moses, S Guerlet, SN Milam, MS Tiscareno

Saturn's northern summertime hemisphere was mapped by JWST/Mid-Infrared Instrument (4.9–27.9 µm) in November 2022, tracing the seasonal evolution of temperatures, aerosols, and chemical species in the 5 years since the end of the Cassini mission. The spectral region between reflected sunlight and thermal emission (5.1–6.8 µm) is mapped for the first time, enabling retrievals of phosphine, ammonia, and water, alongside a system of two aerosol layers (an upper tropospheric haze p < 0.3 bars, and a deeper cloud layer at 1–2 bars). Ammonia displays substantial equatorial enrichment, suggesting similar dynamical processes to those found in Jupiter's equatorial zone. Saturn's North Polar Stratospheric Vortex has warmed since 2017, entrained by westward winds at p < 10 mbar, and exhibits localized enhancements in several hydrocarbons. The strongest latitudinal temperature gradients are co-located with the peaks of the zonal winds, implying wind decay with altitude. Reflectivity contrasts at 5–6 µm compare favorably with albedo contrasts observed by Hubble, and several discrete vortices are observed. A warm equatorial stratospheric band in 2022 is not consistent with a 15-year repeatability for the equatorial oscillation. A stacked system of windshear zones dominates Saturn's equatorial stratosphere, and implies a westward equatorial jet near 1–5 mbar at this epoch. Lower stratospheric temperatures, and local minima in the distributions of several hydrocarbons, imply low-latitude upwelling and a reversal of Saturn's interhemispheric circulation since equinox. Latitudinal distributions of stratospheric ethylene, benzene, methyl, and carbon dioxide are presented for the first time, and we report the first detection of propane bands in the 8–11 µm region.

Funding

Giants through Time: Towards a Comprehensive Giant Planet Climatology

European Research Council

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Exploring the Giant Planet Energy Crisis with JWST

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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NASA JWST Interdisciplinary Scientist. Grant Number: 21-SMDSS21-0013

NASA. Grant Numbers: NAS 5-03127, NAS 5-26555

History

Author affiliation

School of Physics & Astronomy, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets

Volume

128

Issue

9

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

2169-9097

eissn

2169-9100

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-10-10

Language

en

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