Title of article :
Titanʹs atmospheric engine: an overview
Author/Authors :
Samuelson، نويسنده , , Robert E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
19
From page :
127
To page :
145
Abstract :
Heating occurs in Titanʹs stratosphere from the absorption of incident solar radiation by methane and aerosols. About 10% of the incident sunlight reaches Titanʹs surface and causes heating there. Thermal radiation redistributes heat within the atmosphere and cools to space. The resulting vertical temperature profile is stable against convection and a state of radiative equilibrium is established. Equating theoretical and observed temperature profiles enables an empirical determination of the vertical distribution of thermal opacity. A uniformly mixed aerosol is responsible for most of the opacity in the stratosphere, whereas collision-induced absorption of gases is the main contributor in the troposphere. Occasional clouds are observed in the troposphere in spite of the large degrees of methane supersaturation found there. Photochemistry converts CH4 and N2 into more complex hydrocarbons and nitriles in the stratosphere and above. Thin ice clouds of trace organics are formed in the winter and early spring polar regions of the lower stratosphere. Precipitating ice particles serve as condensation sites for supersaturated methane vapor in the troposphere below, resulting in lowered methane degrees of supersaturation in the polar regions. Latitudinal variations of stratospheric temperature are seasonal, and lag instantaneous response to solar irradiation by about one season for two reasons: (1) an actual instantaneous thermal response to a latitudinal distribution of absorbing gases, themselves out of phase with the sun by about one season, and (2) a sluggish dynamical response of the stratosphere to the latitudinal transport of angular momentum, induced by radiative heating and cooling. Mean vertical abundances of stratospheric organics and aerosols are determined primarily by atmospheric chemistry and condensation, whereas latitudinal distributions are more influenced by meridional circulations. In addition to preferential scavenging by precipitating ice particles from above, the polar depletion of supersaturated methane results from periodic scavenging by short-lived tropospheric clouds, coupled with the steady poleward march of the continuously drying atmosphere due to meridional transport.
Keywords :
engine , atmosphere , Titan , OVERVIEW
Journal title :
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
Record number :
2311116
Link To Document :
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