The clouds of Jupiter

Astronomy & Geophysics Oxford University Press (OUP) 40:3 (1999) 3.21-3.25

Authors:

Fred Taylor, Patrick Irwin

Huascaran δ18O as an indicator of tropical climate during the Last Glacial Maximum

Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union (AGU) 26:9 (1999) 1345-1348

Two monopoles of one type and one of another

Journal of High Energy Physics Springer Nature 1999:04 (1999) 029

Authors:

Conor J Houghton, Patrick W Irwin, Arthur J Mountain

Subtropical water vapor as a mediator of rapid global climate change

Chapter in Mechanisms of Global Climate Change at Millennial Time Scales, American Geophysical Union (1999) 22

Cloud structure and composition of Jupiter's atmosphere

Surveys in Geophysics 20:6 (1999) 505-535

Abstract:

The understanding of the composition and cloud structure has advanced greatly in the last few years and in particular was greatly improved upon following the highly successful Pioneer and Voyager missions to that planet. Recently the Galileo spacecraft has gone into orbit about Jupiter and its remote sensing instruments, including the Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) and the Solid State Imager (SSI), have yielded exciting new details of the spatial and vertical structure of the Jovian clouds and volatiles. At the same time Galileo's entry probe has made the first ever in situ measurements of conditions in the atmosphere. Recent ground-based observations have also added to the body of evidence from which conditions in the Jovian atmosphere may be inferred. This paper aims to review the current understanding of the composition and cloud structure of Jupiter's atmosphere in the light of the new Galileo results and recent ground-based, and earth-orbiting telescope observations.