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The Spatial Variation of Water and Ammonia near Jupiter's Great Red SpotThe CSHELL spectrometer at NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility was used in August 1996 to observe Jupiter at 5.18 microns. This wavelength sounds the 3-8 bar region in Jupiter's deep troposphere. A 1-arcsec-wide slit was aligned east-west on Jupiter and stepped from north to south across the Great Red Spot (GRS). Within our spectral bandpass are absorption lines of NH3 and a hot band of CH4. Radiative transfer models indicate that the strength of the CH4 feature is anti-correlated with gaseous H2O between 3 and 6 bars. The CH4 feature is predicted to be very strong for H2O abundances less than 10ppm and it should vanish when H2O > 300ppm. The depths of the observed CH4 and NH3 absorption features varied dramatically near the GRS. The center and east side (planetocentric) of the GRS is dry in both volatiles as indicated by strong CH4 absorption and a weak NH3 line. The CH4 line vanishes and the NH3 feature grows stronger on the west side of the GRS. We interpret this as due to a real variation in both volatiles - H2O and NH3 - due to a common dynamical mechanism. Water clouds are expected to be accompanied by saturated gaseous H2O profiles between 3 and 5 bars. The Galileo imaging team (Banfield et al 1998 Icarus 135, p230) deduced the presence of a cloud near the 4-bar level northwest of the GRS. Our data indicate that this same region is volatile rich; thus the combination of the two datasets provides a compelling case for a water cloud at this location. The deep volatile abundance does not correlate with 5-micron continuum opacity near the GRS. This suggests that the spatial variation of the 5-micron flux near the GRS is due primarily to NH3 clouds, rather than H2O clouds.
Document ID
19990115748
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Bjoraker, G. L.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Orton, G. S.
(Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA United States)
Collard, A. D.
(Meteorological Office United Kingdom)
Stromovsky, L. A.
(Wisconsin Univ. WI United States)
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1999
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Exploration
Meeting Information
Meeting: Division of Planetary Sciences
Location: Padua
Country: Italy
Start Date: October 10, 1999
End Date: October 15, 1999
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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