Latitudinal variations in Uranus' vertical cloud structure from UKIRT UIST observations

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 665:1 (2007) L71-L74

Authors:

PGJ Irwin, NA Teanby, GR Davis

Mars Climate Sounder: An investigation of thermal and water vapor structure, dust and condensate distributions in the atmosphere, and energy balance of the polar regions

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS 112:E5 (2007) ARTN E05S06

Authors:

DJ McCleese, JT Schofield, FW Taylor, SB Calcutt, MC Foote, DM Kass, CB Leovy, DA Paige, PL Read, RW Zurek

Simulating physical weathering of basalt on Earth and Mars

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA 71:15 (2007) A1068-A1068

Authors:

Heather Viles, Bethany Ehlmann, Tomasz Cebula, Colin Wilson, Lisa Mol, Mary Bourke

New upper limits for hydrogen halides on Saturn derived from Cassini-CIRS data

Icarus 185 (2006) 466-475

Authors:

NA Teanby, Fletcher, LN, Irwin, PGJ, Fouchet, T

Scattering properties and location of the jovian 5-micron absorber from Galileo/NIMS limb-darkening observations

Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer 101:3 (2006) 448-461

Authors:

M Roos-Serote, PGJ Irwin

Abstract:

The upper jovian atmosphere is particularly transparent at wavelengths near 5 μ m. Levels well below the cloud layers, which are situated between 0.5 and 2 bar, can be sounded. Large spatial variations of the brightness are observed, which are directly related to the opacity of the overlying cloud layer. Yet, the nature of the 5- μ m absorber in the jovian atmosphere has been subject of much debate. The cloud layer has been modelled many times as a thin, non-scattering layer, the opacity adjusted to fit the overall radiance level. This has proven to work well for individual spectra. Data from the Galileo near infrared mapping spectrometer (NIMS), covering the 0.7- 5.2 μ m range, include a number of observations of the same areas, separated by several hours, at different emission angles. Should the 5 μ m absorber be a thin absorbing layer then, apart from a change in radiance level, the overall shape of the 5- μ m spectrum is also expected to change significantly with emission angle. However, comparison of the 5- μ m spectra measured by NIMS of the same location but at different viewing angles reveals that while the overall radiance level decreases with increasing emission angle, the shape of the spectra remain unchanged. In this paper we present atmospheric models that include scattering to explain this effect. We show that the 5- μ m absorbing cloud particles must be significantly scattering ( ω = 0.9 ± 0.05 ) in order to explain these observations, and find that the base of the cloud layer must reside at pressures less than 2 bar. Furthermore, we show that the scattering within this cloud has important consequences on the retrieval of gas abundances from spectra in the 5- μ m region. © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.