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Juno Jupiter image

Prof. Patrick Irwin

Professor of Planetary Physics

Research theme

  • Exoplanets and planetary physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Exoplanet atmospheres
  • Planetary atmosphere observation analysis
  • Solar system
patrick.irwin@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72083
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 306
Personal research page
NEMESIS
  • About
  • Publications

Isotopic composition of CO2 in the atmosphere of Mars: Fractionation by diffusive separation observed by the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets American Geophysical Union 126:12 (2021) e2021JE006992

Authors:

Juan Alday, Colin F Wilson, Patrick GJ Irwin, Alexander Trokhimovskiy, Franck Montmessin, Anna A Fedorova, Denis A Belyaev, Kevin S Olsen, O Korablev, Franck Lefèvre, Ashwin S Braude, Lucio Baggio, Andrey Patrakeev, Alexey Shakun

Abstract:

Isotopic ratios in atmospheric CO2 are shaped by various processes throughout Mars' history, and can help understand what the atmosphere of early Mars was like to sustain liquid water on its surface. In this study, we monitor the O and C isotopic composition of CO2 between 70 and 130 km for more than half a Martian year using solar occultation observations by the Atmospheric Chemistry Suite onboard the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter. We find the vertical trends of the isotopic ratios to be consistent with the expectations from diffusive separation above the homopause, with average values below this altitude being consistent with Earth-like fractionation (δ13C = −3 ± 37‰; δ18O = −29 ± 38‰; and δ17O = −11 ± 41‰). Using these measurements, we estimate that at least 20%–40% of primordial C on Mars has escaped to space throughout history. The total amount of C lost from the atmosphere is likely to be well in excess of this lower limit, due to carbonate formation and further sink processes. In addition, we propose a photochemical transfer of light O from H2O to CO2 to explain the larger enrichment in the 18O/16O ratio in H2O than in CO2.
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Vertical distribution of aerosols and hazes over Jupiter's great red spot and its surroundings in 2016 from HST/WFC3 imaging

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets American Geophysical Union 126:11 (2021) e2021JE006996

Authors:

Asier Anguiano‐Arteaga, Santiago Pérez‐Hoyos, Agustín Sánchez‐Lavega, José Francisco Sanz‐Requena, Patrick GJ Irwin

Abstract:

In this work, we have analyzed images provided by the Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3 (HST/WFC3) in December 2016, with a spectral coverage from the ultraviolet to the near infrared. We have obtained the spectral reflectivity of the GRS and its surroundings, with particular emphasis on selected, dynamically interesting regions. A spectral characterization of the GRS area is performed following two different procedures: (a) in terms of Altitude/Opacity and Color Indices (AOI and CI); (b) by means of automatic spectral classification. We used the NEMESIS radiative transfer suite to retrieve the main atmospheric parameters (e.g., particle vertical and size distributions, refractive indices) that are able to explain the observed spectral reflectivity. The optimal a priori model atmosphere used for the retrievals is obtained from a grid of about 12,000 different atmospheric models, and choosing the one that best fits South Tropical Zone (STrZ) spectra and its observed limb-darkening. We conclude that the spectral reflectivity of the GRS area is well reproduced with the following layout: (a) a stratospheric haze with its base near the 100 mbar level, with optical depths at 900 nm of the order of unity and particles with a size of 0.3 μm; (b) a more vertically extended tropospheric haze, with τ (900 nm) ∼10 down to 500 mbar and micron sized particles. Both haze layers show a stronger short wavelength absorption, and thus both act as chromophores. The altitude difference between clouds tops in the GRS and surrounding areas is ∼10 km.
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Meridional variations on C2H2 in Jupiter's stratosphere from Juno UVS observations

Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets American Geophysical Union 126:8 (2021) e2021JE006928

Authors:

Rohini S Giles, Thomas K Greathouse, Vincent Hue, G Randall Gladstone, Henrik Melin, Leigh N Fletcher, Patrick GJ Irwin, Joshua A Kammer, Maarten H Versteeg, Bertrand Bonfond, Denis C Grodent, Scott J Bolton, Steven M Levin

Abstract:

The Ultraviolet Spectrograph (UVS) instrument on the Juno mission records far-ultraviolet reflected sunlight from Jupiter. These spectra are sensitive to the abundances of chemical species in the upper atmosphere and to the distribution of the stratospheric haze layer. We combine observations from the first 30 perijoves of the mission in order to study the meridional distribution of acetylene (C2H2) in Jupiter's stratosphere. We find that the abundance of C2H2 decreases toward the poles by a factor of 2–4, in agreement with previous analyses of mid-infrared spectra. This result is expected from insolation rates: near the equator, the UV solar flux is higher, allowing more C2H2 to be generated from the UV photolysis of CH4. The decrease in abundance toward the poles suggests that horizontal mixing rates are not rapid enough to homogenize the latitudinal distribution.
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No evidence of phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus from independent analyses

Nature Astronomy Springer Nature 5:7 (2021) 631-635

Authors:

Geronimo Villanueva, Martin Cordiner, Patrick Irwin, Imke De Pater, B Butler, M Gurwell, SN Milam, Conor Nixon, Statia Luszcz-Cook, Colin Wilson, V Kofman, G Liuzzi, S Faggi, T Fauchez, M Lippi, R Cosentino, A Thelen, A Moullet, P Hartogh, E Molter, S Charnley, G Arney, A Mandell, N Biver, A Vandaele, KR de Kleer, R Kopparapu
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Isotopic fractionation of water and its photolytic products in the atmosphere of Mars

Nature Astronomy Springer Nature 5:9 (2021) 943-950

Authors:

Juan Alday Parejo, Alexander Trokhimovskiy, Patrick GJ Irwin, Colin Wilson, Franck Montmessin, Franck Lefévre, Anna A Fedorova, Denis A Belyaev, Kevin S Olsen, Oleg Korablev, Margaux Vals, Loïc Rossi, Lucio Baggio, Jean-Loup Bertaux, Andrey Patrakeev, Alexey Shakun

Abstract:

The current Martian atmosphere is about five times more enriched in deuterium than Earth’s, providing direct testimony that Mars hosted vastly more water in its early youth than nowadays. Estimates of the total amount of water lost to space from the current mean D/H value depend on a rigorous appraisal of the relative escape between deuterated and non-deuterated water. Isotopic fractionation of D/H between the lower and the upper atmospheres of Mars has been assumed to be controlled by water condensation and photolysis, although their respective roles in influencing the proportions of atomic D and H populations have remained speculative. Here we report HDO and H2O profiles observed by the Atmospheric Chemistry Suite (ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter) in orbit around Mars that, once combined with expected photolysis rates, reveal the prevalence of the perihelion season for the formation of atomic H and D at altitudes relevant for escape. In addition, while condensation-induced fractionation is the main driver of variations of D/H in water vapour, the differential photolysis of HDO and H2O is a more important factor in determining the isotopic composition of the dissociation products.
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