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Super-adiabatic temperature gradient at Jupiter's equatorial zone and implications for the water abundance

journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 16:22 authored by Cheng Li, Michael Allison, Sushil Atreya, Shawn Brueshaber, Leigh FletcherLeigh Fletcher, Tristan Guillot, Liming Li, Jonathan Lunine, Yamila Miguel, Glenn Orton, Paul Steffes, J Hunter Waite, Michael H Wong, Steven Levin, Scott Bolton
The temperature structure of a giant planet was traditionally thought to be an adiabat assuming convective mixing homogenizes entropy. The only in-situ measurement made by the Galileo Probe detected a near-adiabatic temperature structure within one of Jupiter's 5μm hot spots with small but definite local departures from adiabaticity. We analyze Juno's microwave observations near Jupiter's equator (0– 5 oN) and find that the equatorial temperature structure is best characterized by a stable super-adiabatic temperature profile rather than an adiabatic one. Water is the only substance with sufficient abundance to alter the atmosphere's mean molecular weight and prevent dynamic instability if a super-adiabatic temperature gradient exists. Thus, from the super-adiabaticity, our results indicate a water concentration (or the oxygen to hydrogen ratio) of about 4.9 times solar with a possible range of 1.5– 8.3 times solar in Jupiter's equatorial region.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Icarus

Volume

414

Pagination

116028

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0019-1035

eissn

1090-2643

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-09-06

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Leigh Fletcher

Deposit date

2024-05-30

Data Access Statement

Data will be made available on request.

Rights Retention Statement

  • No

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