Nonthermal hydrogen loss at Mars: Contributions of photochemical mechanisms to escape and identification of key processes
ArXiv 2308.13105 (2023)
Spectral determination of the colour and vertical structure of dark spots in Neptune’s atmosphere
Nature Astronomy Springer Nature 7 (2023) 1198-1207
Abstract:
Previous observations of dark vortices in Neptune’s atmosphere, such as Voyager 2’s Great Dark Spot (1989), have been made in only a few broad-wavelength channels, hampering efforts to determine these vortices’ pressure levels and darkening processes. We analyse spectroscopic observations of a dark spot on Neptune identified by the Hubble Space Telescope as NDS-2018; the spectral observations were made in 2019 by the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) of the Very Large Telescope (Chile). The MUSE medium-resolution 475–933 nm reflection spectra allow us to show that dark spots are caused by darkening at short wavelengths (<700 nm) of a deep ~5 bar aerosol layer, which we suggest is the H2S condensation layer. A deep bright spot, named DBS-2019, is also visible on the edge of NDS-2018, with a spectral signature consistent with a brightening of the same 5 bar layer at longer wavelengths (>700 nm). This bright feature is much deeper than previously studied dark-spot companion clouds and may be connected with the circulation that generates and sustains such spots.Spectral determination of the colour and vertical structure of dark spots in Neptune's atmosphere
(2023)
Cassini composite infrared spectrometer: correcting an offset error and refining the pointing parameters for the midinfrared detectors: publisher's note.
Applied Optics Optica Publishing Group 62:23 (2023) 6298
Long-term variability of Jupiter's northern auroral 8-μm CH4 emissions
Icarus Elsevier 406 (2023) 115740