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    Publication Date: 2013-12-31
    Description: Publication date: 1 March 2014 Source: Icarus, Volume 231 Author(s): Leigh N. Fletcher , Imke de Pater , Glenn S. Orton , Heidi B. Hammel , Michael L. Sitko , Patrick G.J. Irwin Imaging and spectroscopy of Neptune’s thermal infrared emission from Keck/LWS (2003), Gemini-N/MICHELLE (2005); VLT/VISIR (2006) and Gemini-S/TReCS (2007) is used to assess seasonal changes in Neptune’s zonal mean temperatures between Voyager-2 observations (1989, heliocentric longitude L s = 236 ° ) and southern summer solstice (2005, L s = 270 ° ). Our aim was to analyse imaging and spectroscopy from multiple different sources using a single self-consistent radiative-transfer model to assess the magnitude of seasonal variability. Globally-averaged stratospheric temperatures measured from methane emission tend towards a quasi-isothermal structure (158–164 K) above the 0.1-mbar level, and are found to be consistent with spacecraft observations of AKARI. This remarkable consistency, despite very different observing conditions, suggests that stratospheric temporal variability, if present, is 〈±5 K at 1 mbar and 〈±3 K at 0.1 mbar during this solstice period. Conversely, ethane emission is highly variable, with abundance determinations varying by more than a factor of two (from 500 to 1200 ppb at 1 mbar). The retrieved C 2 H 6 abundances are extremely sensitive to the details of the T ( p ) derivation, although the underlying cause of the variable ethane emission remains unidentified. Stratospheric temperatures and ethane are found to be latitudinally uniform away from the south pole (assuming a latitudinally-uniform distribution of stratospheric methane), with no large seasonal hemispheric asymmetries evident at solstice. At low and mid-latitudes, comparisons of synthetic Voyager-era images with solstice-era observations suggest that tropospheric zonal temperatures are unchanged since the Voyager 2 encounter, with cool mid-latitudes and a warm equator and pole. A re-analysis of Voyager/IRIS 25–50 μm mapping of tropospheric temperatures and para-hydrogen disequilibrium (a tracer for vertical motions) suggests a symmetric meridional circulation with cold air rising at mid-latitudes (sub-equilibrium para-H 2 conditions) and warm air sinking at the equator and poles (super-equilibrium para-H 2 conditions). The most significant atmospheric changes have occurred at high southern latitudes, where zonal temperatures retrieved from 2003 images suggest a polar enhancement of 7–8 K above the tropopause, and an increase of 5–6 K throughout the 70–90°S region between 0.1 and 200 mbar. Such a large perturbation, if present in 1989, would have been detectable by Voyager/IRIS in a single scan despite its long-wavelength sensitivity, and we conclude that Neptune’s south polar cyclonic vortex increased in strength significantly from Voyager to solstice.
    Print ISSN: 0019-1035
    Electronic ISSN: 1090-2643
    Topics: Physics
    Published by Elsevier
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