University of Leicester
Browse
1912.00918.pdf (1.91 MB)

Colour and Tropospheric Cloud Structure of Jupiter from MUSE/VLT: Retrieving a Universal Chromophore

Download (1.91 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-25, 17:05 authored by Ashwin S. Braude, Patrick G. J. Irwin, Glenn S. Orton, Leigh N. Fletcher
Recent work by Sromovsky et al. (2017, Icarus 291, 232-244) suggested that all red colour in Jupiter's atmosphere could be explained by a single colour-carrying compound, a so-called 'universal chromophore'. We tested this hypothesis on ground-based spectroscopic observations in the visible and near-infrared (480-930 nm) from the VLT/MUSE instrument between 2014 and 2018, retrieving a chromophore absorption spectrum directly from the North Equatorial Belt, and applying it to model spatial variations in colour, tropospheric cloud and haze structure on Jupiter. We found that we could model both the belts and the Great Red Spot of Jupiter using the same chromophore compound, but that this chromophore must exhibit a steeper blue-absorption gradient than the proposed chromophore of Carlson et al. (2016, Icarus 274, 106-115). We retrieved this chromophore to be located no deeper than 0.2+/-0.1 bars in the Great Red Spot and 0.7+/-0.1 bars elsewhere on Jupiter. However, we also identified some spectral variability between 510 nm and 540 nm that could not be accounted for by a universal chromophore. In addition, we retrieved a thick, global cloud layer at 1.4+/-0.3 bars that was relatively spatially invariant in altitude across Jupiter. We found that this cloud layer was best characterised by a real refractive index close to that of ammonia ice in the belts and the Great Red Spot, and poorly characterised by a real refractive index of 1.6 or greater. This may be the result of ammonia cloud at higher altitude obscuring a deeper cloud layer of unknown composition.

History

Citation

Icarus 338 (2020) 113589

Author affiliation

Department of Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Icarus

Volume

338

Pagination

113589 - 113589

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0019-1035

Acceptance date

2019-11-29

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-12-02

Publisher version

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2019.113589

Notes

14 figures + 4 tables, preprint accepted by Icarus on the 29th of November 2019

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC