Far-infrared opacity sources in Titan's troposphere reconsidered
Icarus 209:2 (2010) 854-857
Abstract:
We use Cassini far-infrared limb and nadir spectra, together with recent Huygens results, to shed new light on the controversial far-infrared opacity sources in Titan's troposphere. Although a global cloud of large CH4 ice particles around an altitude of 30km, together with an increase in tropospheric haze opacity with respect to the stratosphere, can fit nadir and limb spectra well, this cloud does not seem consistent with shortwave measurements of Titan. Instead, the N2-CH4 collision-induced absorption coefficients are probably underestimated by at least 50% for low temperatures. © 2010 Elsevier Inc.The science of EChO
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Cambridge University Press (CUP) 6:S276 (2010) 359-370
Venus Cloud Properties from Venus Express VIRTIS Observations
AAS/Division for Planetary Sciences Meeting Abstracts #42 42 (2010) 994-994
Potential for stratospheric Doppler windspeed measurements of Jupiter by sub-millimetre spectroscopy
Planetary and Space Science 58:11 (2010) 1489-1499
Abstract:
The sub-millimetre/microwave range of the spectrum has been exploited in the field of Earth observation by many instruments over the years and has provided a plethora of information on atmospheric chemistry and dynamicshowever, this spectral range has not been fully explored in planetary science, having been exclusively employed to carry out ground-based measurements. To this end, a sub-millimetre instrument, the Orbiter Terahertz Infrared Spectrometer (ORTIS), is studied by the University of Oxford and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, to meet the requirements of the European Space Agency's Cosmic Visions 2015-2025 programme-in particular, the Europa Jupiter System Mission (EJSM), which has the European Space Agency and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration as partners. ORTIS is designed to measure atmospheric temperature, the abundance of stratospheric water vapour and other jovian gases, and is intended to be capable of retrieving vertical profiles of horizontal windspeed in the stratosphere for the first time, from Doppler-shifted emission lines measured at high spectral resolution. In this work, a preliminary study and implementation of the estimation of windspeed profiles on simulated spectra representative of Jupiter is presented, detailing the development of the retrieval algorithm, showing that a sub-millimetre instrument such as ORTIS should be able to retrieve windspeed profiles to an accuracy of about 15 m/s between 70 and 200 km/0.1-10 mb using a single near-limb measurement, for expected noise amplitudes. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.. All rights reserved.The Gemini Nici Planet-Finding Campaign: Discovery of a close substellar companion to the young debris disk star PZ TEL
Astrophysical Journal Letters 720:1 PART 2 (2010)