Abundances of Jupiter's Trace Hydrocarbons From Voyager and Cassini

(2010)

Authors:

Conor A Nixon, Richard K Achterberg, Paul N Romani, Mark Allen, Xi Zhang, Nicholas A Teanby, Patrick GJ Irwin, F Michael Flasar

A tropical haze band in Titan's stratosphere

Icarus 207:1 (2010) 485-490

Authors:

R de Kok, PGJ Irwin, NA Teanby, S Vinatier, F Tosi, A Negrão, S Osprey, A Adriani, ML Moriconi, A Coradini

Abstract:

Inspection of near-infrared images from Cassini's Imaging Science Subsystem and Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer have revealed a new feature in Titan's haze structure: a narrow band of increased scattering by haze south of the equator. The band seems to indicate a region of very limited mixing in the lower stratosphere, which causes haze particles to be trapped there. This could explain the sharp separation between the two hemispheres, known as the north-south asymmetry, seen in images. The separation of the two hemispheres can also be seen in the stratosphere above 150 km using infrared spectra measured by Cassini's Composite Infrared Spectrometer. Titan's behaviour in the lower tropical stratosphere is remarkably similar to that of the Earth's tropical stratosphere, which hints at possible common dynamical processes. © 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Compositional evidence for Titan's stratospheric tilt

Planetary and Space Science 58:5 (2010) 792-800

Authors:

NA Teanby, PGJ Irwin, R de Kok

Abstract:

Five years of Cassini CIRS infrared spectra have been used to determine the tilt of Titan's stratospheric symmetry axis with respect to the solid body rotation axis. Measurements of HCN abundance centred around 5 mbar (125 km altitude) at equatorial latitudes show the symmetry axis is tilted by 4.0 ± 1 . 5{ring operator} in a direction 70 ± 40{ring operator} W of the sub-solar point. This value is consistent with tilts determined from temperature and haze measurements by Achterberg et al. (2008a) and Roman et al. (2009). The consistency of results from three independent methods suggests that Titan's entire stratosphere is tilted and provides a powerful constraint on the underlying atmospheric dynamics. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Temporal pixel multiplexing for simultaneous high-speed, high-resolution imaging.

Nat Methods 7:3 (2010) 209-211

Authors:

Gil Bub, Matthias Tecza, Michiel Helmes, Peter Lee, Peter Kohl

Abstract:

We introduce an imaging modality that, by offsetting pixel-exposure times during capture of a single image frame, embeds temporal information in each frame. This allows simultaneous acquisition of full-resolution images at native detector frame rates and high-speed image sequences at reduced resolution, without increasing bandwidth requirements. We demonstrate this method using macroscopic and microscopic examples, including imaging calcium transients in heart cells at 250 Hz using a 10-Hz megapixel camera.

Mudball: Surface dust and Snowball Earth deglaciation

Journal of Geophysical Research American Geophysical Union (AGU) 115:D3 (2010)

Authors:

Dorian S Abbot, Raymond T Pierrehumbert