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26 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0107361

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The Altitude of an Infrared Bright Cloud Feature on Neptune from Near-Infrared Spectroscopy
Henry G. Roe ; James R. Graham ; Ian S. McLean ; Imke de Pater ; E.E. Becklin ; Donald F. Figer ; Andrea M. Gilbert ; James E. Larkin ; N.A. Levenson ; Harry I. Teplitz ; Mavourneen K. Wilcox ;
Date 19 Jul 2001
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationUCB), James R. Graham (UCB), Ian S. McLean (UCLA), Imke de Pater (UCB), E.E. Becklin (UCLA), Donald F. Figer (STScI), Andrea M. Gilbert, James E. Larkin (UCLA), N.A. Levenson (JHU), Harry I. Teplitz (GSFC), and Mavourneen K. Wilcox (UCLA
AbstractWe present 2.03-2.30 micron near-infrared spectroscopy of Neptune taken 1999 June 2 (UT) with the W.M. Keck Observatory’s near-infrared spectrometer (NIRSPEC) during the commissioning of the instrument. The spectrum is dominated by a bright cloud feature, possibly a storm or upwelling, in the southern hemisphere at approximately 50 degrees S latitude. The spectrum also includes light from a dimmer northern feature at approximately 30 degrees N latitude. We compare our spectra (R ~ 2000) of these two features with a simple model of Neptune’s atmosphere. Given our model assumption that the clouds are flat reflecting layers, we find that the top of the bright southern cloud feature sat at a pressure level of 0.14 (+0.05, -0.03) bar, and thus this cloud did not extend into the stratosphere (P < 0.1 bar). A similar analysis of the dimmer northern feature gives a cloud-top pressure of 0.084 +/- 0.026 bar. This suggests that the features we observed efficiently transport methane to the base of the stratosphere, but do not directly transport methane to the upper stratosphere (P < 0.01-0.001 bar) where photolysis occurs. Our observations do not constrain how far these clouds penetrate down into the troposphere. We find that our model fits to the data restrict the fraction of molecular hydrogen in ortho/para thermodynamic equilibrium to greater than 0.8.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0107361
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