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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 ratios in Titan's atmosphere from Cassini CIRS limb sounding:: HC3N in the north

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS 681:2 (2008) L109-L111

Authors:

DE Jennings, CA Nixon, A Jolly, B Bezard, A Coustenis, S Vinatier, PGJ Irwin, NA Teanby, PN Romani, RK Achterberg, FM Flasar
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Retrieval of air temperature profiles in the Venusian mesosphere from VIRTIS-M data: Description and validation of algorithms

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS 113 (2008) ARTN E00B09

Authors:

Davide Grassi, P Drossart, G Piccioni, NI Ignatiev, LV Zasova, A Adriani, ML Moriconi, PGJ Irwin, A Negrao, A Migliorini
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The 12C/13C isotopic ratio in Titan hydrocarbons from Cassini/CIRS infrared spectra

ICARUS 195:2 (2008) 778-791

Authors:

CA Nixon, RK Achterberg, S Vinatier, B Bezard, A Coustenis, PGJ Irwin, NA Teanby, R de Kok, PN Romani, DE Jennings, GL Bjoraker, FM Flasar
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Titan's winter polar vortex structure revealed by chemical tracers

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS 113:E12 (2008) ARTN E12003

Authors:

NA Teanby, R de Kok, PGJ Irwin, S Osprey, S Vinatier, PJ Gierasch, PL Read, FM Flasar, BJ Conrath, RK Achterberg, B Bezard, CA Nixon, SB Calcutt
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The 2003 November 14 occultation by Titan of TYC 1343-1865-1. II. Analysis of light curves

Icarus 192:2 (2007) 503-518

Authors:

A Zalucha, A Fitzsimmons, JL Elliot, J Thomas-Osip, HB Hammel, VS Dhillon, TR Marsh, FW Taylor, PGJ Irwin

Abstract:

We observed a stellar occultation by Titan on 2003 November 14 from La Palma Observatory using ULTRACAM with three Sloan filters: u′, g′, and i′ (358, 487, and 758 nm, respectively). The occultation probed latitudes 2° S and 1° N during immersion and emersion, respectively. A prominent central flash was present in only the i′ filter, indicating wavelength-dependent atmospheric extinction. We inverted the light curves to obtain six lower-limit temperature profiles between 335 and 485 km (0.04 and 0.003 mb) altitude. The i′ profiles agreed with the temperature measured by the Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument [Fulchignoni, M., and 43 colleagues, 2005. Nature 438, 785-791] above 415 km (0.01 mb). The profiles obtained from different wavelength filters systematically diverge as altitude decreases, which implies significant extinction in the light curves. Applying an extinction model [Elliot, J.L., Young, L.A., 1992. Astron. J. 103, 991-1015] gave the altitudes of line of sight optical depth equal to unity: 396 ± 7 and 401 ± 20  km (u′ immersion and emersion); 354 ± 7 and 387 ± 7  km (g′ immersion and emersion); and 336 ± 5 and 318 ± 4  km (i′ immersion and emersion). Further analysis showed that the optical depth follows a power law in wavelength with index 1.3 ± 0.2. We present a new method for determining temperature from scintillation spikes in the occulting body's atmosphere. Temperatures derived with this method are equal to or warmer than those measured by the Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument. Using the highly structured, three-peaked central flash, we confirmed the shape of Titan's middle atmosphere using a model originally derived for a previous Titan occultation [Hubbard, W.B., and 45 colleagues, 1993. Astron. Astrophys. 269, 541-563]. © 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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