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 112:5 (2007)

Authors:

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

Abstract:

Against a backdrop of intensive exploration of the Martian surface environment, intehded to lead to human exploration, some aspects of the modern climate and the meteorology of Mars remain relatively unexplored. In particular, there is a need for detailed measurements of the vertical profiles of atmospheric temperature, water vapor, dust, and condensates to understand the intricately related processes upon which the surface conditions, and those encountered during descent by landers, depend. The most important of these missing data are accurate and extensive temperature measurements with high vertical resolution. The Mars Climate Sounder experiment on the 2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, described here, is the latest attempt to characterize the Martian atmosphere with the sort of coverage and precision achieved by terrestrial weather satellites. If successful, it is expected to lead to corresponding improvements in our understanding of meteorological phenomena and to enable improved general circulation models of the Martian atmosphere for climate studies on a range of timescales. Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.

The meridional phosphine distribution in Saturn's upper troposphere from Cassini/CIRS observations

Icarus 188:1 (2007) 72-88

Authors:

LN Fletcher, PGJ Irwin, NA Teanby, GS Orton, PD Parrish, SB Calcutt, N Bowles, R de Kok, C Howett, FW Taylor

Abstract:

The Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) has been used to derive the vertical and meridional variation of temperature and phosphine (PH3) abundance in Saturn's upper troposphere. PH3 has a significant effect on the measured radiances in the thermal infrared and between May 2004 and September 2005 CIRS recorded thousands of spectra in both the far (10-600 cm-1) and mid (600-1400 cm-1) infrared, at a variety of latitudes covering the southern hemisphere. Low spectral resolution (15 cm-1) data has been used to constrain the temperature structure of the troposphere between 100 and 500 mbar. The vertical distributions of phosphine and ammonia were retrieved from far-infrared spectra at the highest spectral resolution (0.5 cm-1), and lower resolution (2.5 cm-1) mid-infrared data were used to map the meridional variation in the abundance of phosphine in the 250-500 mbar range. Temperature variations at the 250 mbar level are shown to occur on the same scale as the prograde and retrograde jets in Saturn's atmosphere [Porco, C.C., and 34 colleagues, 2005. Science 307, 1243-1247]. The PH3 abundance at 250 mbar is found to be enhanced at the equator when compared with mid-latitudes. At mid latitudes we see anti-correlation between temperature and PH3 abundance at 250 mbar, phosphine being enhanced at 45° S and depleted at 25 and 55° S. The vertical distribution is markedly different polewards of 60-65° S, with depleted PH3 at 500 mbar but a slower decline in abundance with altitude when compared with the mid-latitudes. This variation is similar to the variations of cloud and aerosol parameters observed in the visible and near infrared, and may indicate the subsidence of tropospheric air at polar latitudes, coupled with a diminished sunlight penetration depth reducing the rate of PH3 photolysis in the polar region. © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

The meridional phosphine distribution in Saturn's upper troposphere from Cassini/CIRS observations

Icarus 188 (2007) 72-88

Authors:

NE Bowles, L N Fletcher, N A Teanby, P G J Irwin

Examples of new evolved planetary nebulae from the SuperCOSMOS H-alpha survey

Anglo-Australian Observatory Epping Newsletter 111 (2007) 22-22

Authors:

Jayne Birkby, Quentin Parker, Brent Miszalski, Agnes Acker, David Frew

Oxygen compounds in Titan's stratosphere as observed by Cassini CIRS

Icarus 186:2 (2007) 354-363

Authors:

FW Taylor, de Kok R, Irwin PGJ, Teanby NA