Advanced Net Flux Radiometer for the Ice Giants

Space Science Reviews Springer 216 (2020) 11

Authors:

S Aslam, RK Achterberg, SB Calcutt, V Cottini, NJ Gorius, T Hewagama, PG Irwin, CA Nixon, G Quilligan, M Roos-Serote, AA Simon, D Tran, G Villanueva

Abstract:

The design of an advanced Net Flux Radiometer (NFR), for inclusion as a payload on a future Ice Giants probe mission, is given. The Ice Giants NFR (IG-NFR) will measure the upward and downward radiation flux (hence net radiation flux), in seven spectral bands, spanning the range from solar to far infra-red wavelengths, each with a 5° Field-Of-View (FOV) and in five sequential view angles (±80°, ±45°, and 0°) as a function of altitude. IG-NFR measurements within either Uranus or Neptune’s atmospheres, using dedicated spectral filter bands will help derive radiative heating and cooling profiles, and will significantly contribute to our understanding of the planet’s atmospheric heat balance and structure, tropospheric 3-D flow, and compositions and opacities of the cloud layers. The IG-NFR uses an array of non-imaging Winston cones integrated to a matched thermopile detector Focal Plane Assembly (FPA), with individual bandpass filters, housed in a diamond windowed vacuum micro-vessel. The FPA thermopile detector signals are read out in parallel mode, amplified and processed by a multi-channel digitizer application specific integrated circuit (MCD ASIC) under field programmable gate array (FPGA) control. The vacuum micro-vessel rotates providing chopping between FOV’s of upward and downward radiation fluxes. This unique design allows for small net flux measurements in the presence of large ambient fluxes and rapidly changing ambient temperatures during the probe descent to ≥10 bar pressure.

Venus III The View After Venus Express

Springer, 2020

Authors:

Bruno Bézard, Christopher Russell, Takehiko Satoh, Suzanne Smrekar, Colin Wilson

Abstract:

The ten papers in this book, written by an international team of specialists, are the products of this effort.

Stormy water on Mars: the distribution and saturation of atmospheric water during the dusty season

Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (2020)

Authors:

AA Fedorova, F Montmessin, O Korablev, M Luginin, A Trokhimovskiy, DA Belyaev, NI Ignatiev, F Lefèvre, Juan Alday, Patrick Irwin, Kevin Olsen, J-L Bertaux, E Millour, A Määttänen, A Shakun, AV Grigoriev, A Patrakeev, S Korsa, N Kokonkov, L Baggio, F Forget, Colin Wilson

Abstract:

The loss of water from Mars to space is thought to result from the transport of water to the upper atmosphere, where it is dissociated to hydrogen and escapes the planet. Recent observations have suggested large, rapid seasonal intrusions of water into the upper atmosphere, boosting the hydrogen abundance. We use the Atmospheric Chemistry Suite on the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter to characterize the water distribution by altitude. Water profiles during the 2018–2019 southern spring and summer stormy seasons show that high-altitude water is preferentially supplied close to perihelion, and supersaturation occurs even when clouds are present. This implies that the potential for water to escape from Mars is higher than previously thought.

PASCALE Spectral Data for OSIRIS-REx

University of Oxford (2020)

Authors:

Neil Bowles, Kerri Donaldson Hanna

Abstract:

Data created as part of spectral library and blind test programme in support of NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission to asteroid Bennu

The vertical structure of CO in the Martian atmosphere from the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter

University of Oxford (2020)

Abstract:

CO VMR vertical profiles for the atmosphere of Mars derived from the mid infrared channel of the Atmospheric Chemistry Suite (ACS MIR) on the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) from the first thee months of science operations. Data archived in support of the manuscript titled The vertical structure of CO in the Martian atmosphere from the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter published in Nature Geoscience.