Title of article
Dynamical implications of Jupiterʹs tropospheric ammonia abundance
Author/Authors
Showman، نويسنده , , Adam P. and de Pater، نويسنده , , Imke، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
13
From page
192
To page
204
Abstract
Groundbased radio observations indicate that Jupiterʹs ammonia is globally depleted from 0.6 bars to at least 4–6 bars relative to the deep abundance of ∼3 times solar, a fact that has so far defied explanation. The observations also indicate that (i) the depletion is greater in belts than zones, and (ii) the greatest depletion occurs within Jupiterʹs local 5-μm hot spots, which have recently been detected at radio wavelengths. Here, we first show that both the global depletion and its belt-zone variation can be explained by a simple model for the interaction of moist convection with Jupiterʹs cloud-layer circulation. If the global depletion is dynamical in origin, then important endmember models for the belt-zone circulation can be ruled out. Next, we show that the radio observations of Jupiterʹs 5-μm hot spots imply that the equatorial wave inferred to cause hot spots induces vertical parcel oscillation of a factor of ∼2 in pressure near the 2-bar level, which places important constraints on hot-spot dynamics. Finally, using spatially resolved radio maps, we demonstrate that low-latitude features exceeding ∼4000 km diameter, such as the equatorial plumes and large vortices, are also depleted in ammonia from 0.6 bars to at least 2 bars relative to the deep abundance of 3 times solar. If any low-latitude features exist that contain 3-times-solar ammonia up to the 0.6-bar ammonia condensation level, they must have diameters less than ∼4000 km.
Keywords
Radio observations , Jupiteratmosphere , Atmospheresdynamics , Atmospherescomposition
Journal title
Icarus
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Icarus
Record number
2373363
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