ISO LWS far-infrared observations of jupiter and saturn
European Space Agency, (Special Publication) ESA SP (1997) 325-328
Abstract:
Portions of the far-infrared spectra of Jupiter and Saturn measured in grating mode with the ISO Long Wavelength Spectrometer (LWS) are presented. The observed Jovian spectrum between 55 and 90 μm is compared to an atmospheric radiative transfer model using expected values for the constituent vertical concentration profiles. Rotational transitions of ammonia are responsible for the absorption features observed against the hydrogen continuum emission. There is good agreement between the model and data for an ammonia mole fraction of 2×10-4 constrained by saturation up to a 75 mbar cut-off, above which it is assumed all the ammonia is destroyed by ultraviolet radiation. Three sections of the saturnian spectrum are compared to synthetic spectra and absorption features due to methane are identified. The mole fraction of methane is constrained between 0.7-1.5 10-3.Warming early Mars with carbon dioxide clouds that scatter infrared radiation.
Science (New York, N.Y.) 278:5341 (1997) 1273-1276
Abstract:
Geomorphic evidence that Mars was warm enough to support flowing water about 3.8 billion years ago presents a continuing enigma that cannot be explained by conventional greenhouse warming mechanisms. Model calculations show that the surface of early Mars could have been warmed through a scattering variant of the greenhouse effect, resulting from the ability of the carbon dioxide ice clouds to reflect the outgoing thermal radiation back to the surface. This process could also explain how Earth avoided an early irreversible glaciation and could extend the size of the habitable zone on extrasolar planets around stars.SU(3) monopoles and their fields
Physical Review D American Physical Society (APS) 56:8 (1997) 5200-5208
Lower-Tropospheric Heat Transport in the Pacific Storm Track
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences American Meteorological Society 54:11 (1997) 1533-1543
Temporal and spatial variations in the Venus mesosphere retrieved from Pioneer Venus OIR
Advances in Space Research 19:8 (1997) 1169-1179