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Temperature and Composition Disturbances in the Southern Auroral Region of Jupiter Revealed by JWST/MIRI

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posted on 2024-07-04, 13:08 authored by Pablo Rodríguez‐Ovalle, Thierry Fouchet, Sandrine Guerlet, Thibault Cavalié, Vincent Hue, Manuel López‐Puertas, Emmanuel Lellouch, James A Sinclair, Imke de Pater, Leigh FletcherLeigh Fletcher, Michael H Wong, Jake Harkett, Glenn S Orton, Ricardo Hueso, Agustín Sánchez‐Lavega, Tom S Stallard, Dominique Bockelee‐Morvan, Oliver King, Michael T Roman, Henrik Melin

Jupiter's South Polar Region (SPR) was observed by James Webb Space Telescope/Mid‐Infrared Instrument in December 2022. We used the Medium Resolution Spectrometer mode to provide new information about Jupiter's South Polar stratosphere. The southern auroral region was visible and influenced the atmosphere in several ways: (a) In the interior of the southern auroral oval, we retrieved peak temperatures at two distinct pressure levels near 0.01 and 1 mbar, with warmer temperatures with respect to non‐auroral regions of 12 ± 2 K and 37 ± 4 K respectively. A cold polar vortex is centered at 65°S at 10 mbar. (b) We found that the homopause is elevated to km above the 1‐bar pressure level inside the auroral oval compared to km at neighboring latitudes and with an upper altitude of 350 km in regions not affected by auroral precipitation. (c) The retrieved abundance of C2H2 shows an increase within the auroral oval, and it exhibits high abundances throughout the polar region. The retrieved abundance of C2H6 increases toward the pole, without being localized in the auroral oval, in contrast with previous analysis (Sinclair et al., 2018, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2017.09.016). We determined that the warming at 0.01 mbar and the elevated homopause might be caused by the flux of charged particles depositing their energy in the SPR. The 1‐mbar hotspot may arise from adiabatic heating resulting from auroral‐driven downwelling. The cold region at 10 mbar may be caused by radiative cooling by stratospheric aerosols. The differences in spatial distribution seem to indicate that the hydrocarbons analyzed are affected differently by auroral precipitation.

Funding

Agence Nationale de la Recherche. Grant Number: ANR-21-CE49-0019

French Government, Initiative d'Excellence d'Aix-Marseille Université—A*MIDEX. Grant Number: AMX-22-CPJ-04

Agencia Estatal de Investigación, MCIN/AEI/. Grant Numbers: PID2019- 110689RB- I00, CEX2021- 001131-S, PID 2019-109467GB-I00

Space Telescope Science Institute. Grant Number: JWST-ERS-01373

Solar System Observations Planetary Astronomy Program. Grant Number: NNH17ZDA001N

National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Grant Number: 80NM0018D0004

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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Grupos Gobierno Vasco. Grant Number: IT1742-22

History

Citation

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 2024, 129, e2024JE008299

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets

Volume

129

Issue

6

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

issn

2169-9097

eissn

2169-9100

Acceptance date

2024-06-03

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-12-20

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Leigh Fletcher

Deposit date

2024-07-02

Data Access Statement

Level-3 calibrated Jupiter MIRI/MRS data from the standard pipeline are available directly from the MAST archive (https://mast.stsci.edu/portal/Mashup/Clients/Mast/Portal.html MISSION: JWST, PROPOSAL-ID: 1373). The radiative transfer and retrieval code used in this work and previous works (Fouchet et al., 2016; Guerlet et al., 2009) is available for download (Rodriguez-Ovalle, 2024). The JWST calibration pipeline is available via Bushouse et al. (2022), this work used version 1.11.3. The data products produced in this study (temperature and abundance maps) are available from Rodriguez-Ovalle and Fouchet (2024).

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