Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10701330 Icarus 2013 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
The most prominent feature throughout all five maps is the high brightness temperature of Saturn's subtropical latitudes near ±9° (planetographic). These latitudes bracket the equator, which has some of the lowest brightness temperatures observed on the planet. The observed high brightness temperatures indicate that the atmosphere is sub-saturated, locally, with respect to fully saturated ammonia in the cloud region. Saturn's northern hemisphere storm was also captured in the March 20, 2011 map, and is very bright, reaching brightness temperatures of 166 K compared to 148 K for the saturated atmosphere model. We find that both the subtropical bands and the 2010-2011 northern storm require very low ammonia RH below the ammonia cloud layer, which is located near 1.5 bars in the reference atmosphere, in order to achieve the high brightness temperatures observed. The disturbances in the southern hemisphere between −42° and −47° also require very low ammonia RH at levels below the ammonia cloud base. Aside from these local and regional anomalies, we find that Saturn's atmosphere has on average 70 ± 15% ammonia relative humidity in the cloud region. We present three options to explain the high 2.2-cm brightness temperatures. One is that the dryness, i.e., the low RH, is due to higher than average atmospheric temperatures with constant ammonia mixing ratios. The second is that the bright subtropical bands represent dry zones created by a meridionally overturning circulation, much like the Hadley circulation on Earth. The last is that the drying in both the southern hemisphere storms and 2010-2011 northern storm is an intrinsic property of convection in giant planet atmospheres. Some combination of the latter two options is argued as the likely explanation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Space and Planetary Science
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