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Stellar Occultation Probe of Triton's AtmosphereThe goals of this research were (i) to better characterize Triton's atmospheric structure by probing a region not well investigated by Voyager and (ii) to begin acquiring baseline data for an investigation of the time evolution of the atmosphere which will set limits on the thermal conductivity of the surface and the total mass of N2 in the atmosphere. Our approach was to use observations (with the Kuiper Airborne Observatory) of a stellar occultation by Triton that was predicted to occur on 1993 July 10. As described in the attached reprint, we achieved these objectives through observation of this occultation and a subsequent one with the KAO in 1995. We found new results about Triton's atmospheric structure from the analysis of the two occultations observed with the KAO and ground-based data. These stellar occultation observations made both in the visible and infrared, have good spatial coverage of Triton including the first Triton central-flash observations, and are the first data to probe the 20-100 km altitude level on Triton. The small-planet light curve model of Elliot and Young (AJ 103, 991-1015) was generalized to include stellar flux refracted by the far limb, and then fitted to the data. Values of the pressure, derived from separate immersion and emersion chords, show no significant trends with latitude indicating that Triton's atmosphere is spherically symmetric at approximately 50 km altitude to within the error of the measurements. However, asymmetry observed in the central flash indicates the atmosphere is not homogeneous at the lowest levels probed (approximately 20 km altitude). From the average of the 1995 occultation data, the equivalent-isothermal temperature of the atmosphere is 47 +/- 1 K and the atmospheric pressure at 1400 km radius (approximately 50 km altitude) is 1.4 +/- 0.1 microbar. Both of these are not consistent with a model based on Voyager UVS and RSS observations in 1989 (Strobel et al, Icarus 120, 266-289). The atmospheric temperature from the occultation is 5 K colder than that predicted by the model and the observed pressure is a factor of 1.8 greater than the model.
Document ID
19980017821
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Elliot, James L.
(Lowell Observatory Flagstaff, AZ United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 20, 1998
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Exploration
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:206749
NASA/CR-97-206749
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-1276
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS5-26555
CONTRACT_GRANT: GO-05825
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-1912
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-1494
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG2-836
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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