Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad
European University of Madrid
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Featured researches published by Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad.
Nature | 2011
A. Sánchez-Lavega; T. del Río-Gaztelurrutia; R. Hueso; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; J.F. Sanz-Requena; J. Legarreta; E. García-Melendo; F. Colas; J. Lecacheux; Leigh N. Fletcher; D. Barrado-Navascués; D. Parker
Convective storms occur regularly in Saturn’s atmosphere. Huge storms known as Great White Spots, which are ten times larger than the regular storms, are rarer and occur about once per Saturnian year (29.5 Earth years). Current models propose that the outbreak of a Great White Spot is due to moist convection induced by water. However, the generation of the global disturbance and its effect on Saturn’s permanent winds have hitherto been unconstrained by data, because there was insufficient spatial resolution and temporal sampling to infer the dynamics of Saturn’s weather layer (the layer in the troposphere where the cloud forms). Theoretically, it has been suggested that this phenomenon is seasonally controlled. Here we report observations of a storm at northern latitudes in the peak of a weak westward jet during the beginning of northern springtime, in accord with the seasonal cycle but earlier than expected. The storm head moved faster than the jet, was active during the two-month observation period, and triggered a planetary-scale disturbance that circled Saturn but did not significantly alter the ambient zonal winds. Numerical simulations of the phenomenon show that, as on Jupiter, Saturn’s winds extend without decay deep down into the weather layer, at least to the water-cloud base at pressures of 10–12 bar, which is much deeper than solar radiation penetrates.
Experimental Astronomy | 2014
Olivier Mousis; R. Hueso; J.-P. Beaulieu; Sylvain Bouley; B. Carry; F. Colas; A. Klotz; C. Pellier; J.-M. Petit; P. Rousselot; Mohamad Ali-Dib; W. Beisker; M. Birlan; C. Buil; A. Delsanti; E. Frappa; Heidi B. Hammel; Anny Chantal Levasseur-Regourd; Glenn S. Orton; A. Sánchez-Lavega; A. Santerne; P. Tanga; J. Vaubaillon; B. Zanda; David Baratoux; T. Böhm; V. Boudon; A. Bouquet; L. Buzzi; J. L. Dauvergne
Amateur contributions to professional publications have increased exponentially over the last decades in the field of planetary astronomy. Here we review the different domains of the field in which collaborations between professional and amateur astronomers are effective and regularly lead to scientific publications.We discuss the instruments, detectors, software and methodologies typically used by amateur astronomers to collect the scientific data in the different domains of interest. Amateur contributions to the monitoring of planets and interplanetary matter, characterization of asteroids and comets, as well as the determination of the physical properties of Kuiper Belt Objects and exoplanets are discussed.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
A. Sánchez-Lavega; T. del Río-Gaztelurrutia; R. Hueso; Santiago Perez-Hoyos; Enrique Garcia-Melendo; A. Antuñano; I. Mendikoa; J. F. Rojas; J. Lillo; D. Barrado-Navascués; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; Christopher Y. Go; D. Peach; T. Barry; D. P. Milika; P. Nicholas; A. Wesley
We investigate the long-term motion of Saturns north pole hexagon and the structure of its associated eastward jet, using Cassini imaging science system and ground-based images from 2008 to 2014. We show that both are persistent features that have survived the long polar night, the jet profile remaining essentially unchanged. During those years, the hexagon vertices showed a steady rotation period of 10 h 39 min 23.01 ± 0.01 s. The analysis of Voyager 1 and 2 (1980–1981) and Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based (1990–1991) images shows a period shorter by 3.5 s due to the presence at the time of a large anticyclone. We interpret the hexagon as a manifestation of a vertically trapped Rossby wave on the polar jet and, because of their survival and unchanged properties under the strong seasonal variations in insolation, we propose that both hexagon and jet are deep-rooted atmospheric features that could reveal the true rotation of the planet Saturn.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
A. Sánchez-Lavega; Javier Peralta; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; R. Hueso; Santiago Perez-Hoyos; I. Mendikoa; J. F. Rojas; Takeshi Horinouchi; Yeon Joo Lee; Shigeto Watanabe
We report Venus image observations around the two maximum elongations of the planet at 2015 June and October. From these images we describe the global atmospheric dynamics and cloud morphology in the planet before the arrival of JAXAs Akatsuki mission on 2015 December 7. The majority of the images were acquired at ultraviolet wavelengths (380–410 nm) using small telescopes. The Venus dayside was also observed with narrowband filters at other wavelengths (890 nm, 725–950 nm, 1.435 μm CO2 band) using the instrument PlanetCam-UPV/EHU at the 2.2 m telescope in Calar Alto Observatory. In all cases, the lucky imaging methodology was used to improve the spatial resolution of the images over the atmospheric seeing. During the April–June period, the morphology of the upper cloud showed an irregular and chaotic texture with a well-developed equatorial dark belt (afternoon hemisphere), whereas during October–December the dynamical regime was dominated by planetary-scale waves (Y-horizontal, C-reversed, and ψ-horizontal features) formed by long streaks, and banding suggesting more stable conditions. Measurements of the zonal wind velocity with cloud tracking in the latitude range from 50°N to 50°S shows agreement with retrievals from previous works.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005
E. Escolà-Sirisi; J. Juan-Samsó; Joaquin Vidal-Sainz; P. Lampens; Enrique Garcia-Melendo; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; Patrick Wils
HIP 7666 is a variable star newly discovered during the Hipparcos mission and classified as of unknown type (ESA 1997, The Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues, ESA SP-1200). During 23 nights between July 2000 and November 2000, over 2300 CCD observations in the V band were obtained. These data show that the new variable is a detached eclipsing binary system with an orbital period of 2.37229 days. In addition, one of the components undergoes very short-period oscillations with a main pulsation frequency of 24.46 or 25.47 c/d. HIP 7666 is therefore a new member of the rare group of detached eclipsing binary systems with a δ Scuti type component.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
A. Sánchez-Lavega; John H. Rogers; G. S. Orton; Enrique Garcia-Melendo; J. Legarreta; F. Colas; J. L. Dauvergne; R. Hueso; J. F. Rojas; Santiago Perez-Hoyos; I. Mendikoa; P. Iñurrigarro; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; Thomas W. Momary; Candice J. Hansen; P. Miles; A. Wesley
We describe a huge planetary-scale disturbance in the highest-speed Jovian jet at latitude 23.5°N that was first observed in October 2016 during the Juno perijove-2 approach. An extraordinary outburst of four plumes was involved in the disturbance development. They were located in the range of planetographic latitudes from 22.2° to 23.0°N and moved faster than the jet peak with eastward velocities in the range 155 to 175 m s 1. In the wake of the plumes, a turbulent pattern of bright and dark spots (wave number 20–25) formed and progressed during October and November on both sides of the jet, moving with speeds in the range 100–125 m s 1 and leading to a new reddish and homogeneous belt when activity ceased in late November. Nonlinear numerical models reproduce the disturbance cloud patterns as a result of the interaction between local sources (the plumes) and the zonal eastward jet.
Nature Communications | 2016
A. Sánchez-Lavega; Enrique Garcia-Melendo; Santiago Perez-Hoyos; R. Hueso; Michael H. Wong; Amy A. Simon; J.F. Sanz-Requena; A. Antuñano; N. Barrado-Izagirre; I. Garate-Lopez; J. F. Rojas; T. del Río-Gaztelurrutia; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; I. de Pater; Liming Li; T. Barry
Saturn has an intense and broad eastward equatorial jet with a complex three-dimensional structure mixed with time variability. The equatorial region experiences strong seasonal insolation variations enhanced by ring shadowing, and three of the six known giant planetary-scale storms have developed in it. These factors make Saturns equator a natural laboratory to test models of jets in giant planets. Here we report on a bright equatorial atmospheric feature imaged in 2015 that moved steadily at a high speed of 450 ms−1 not measured since 1980–1981 with other equatorial clouds moving within an ample range of velocities. Radiative transfer models show that these motions occur at three altitude levels within the upper haze and clouds. We find that the peak of the jet (latitudes 10° N to 10° S) suffers intense vertical shears reaching +2.5 ms−1 km−1, two orders of magnitude higher than meridional shears, and temporal variability above 1 bar altitude level.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
J. Legarreta; N. Barrado-Izagirre; Enrique Garcia-Melendo; A. Sánchez-Lavega; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad
Context. A peculiar atmospheric feature was observed in the equatorial zone (EZ) of Jupiter between September and December 2012 in ground-based and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images. This feature consisted of two low albedo Y-shaped cloud structures (Y1 and Y2) oriented along the equator and centred on it (latitude 0.5°-1°N). Aims. We wanted to characterize these features, and also tried to find out their properties and understand their nature. Methods. We tracked these features to obtain their velocity and analyse their cloud morphology and the interaction with their surroundings. We present numerical simulations of the phenomenon based on one- and two-layer shallow water models under a Gaussian pulse excitation. Results. Each Y feature had a characteristic zonal length of ~15° (18?000 km) and a meridional width (distance between the north-south extremes of the Y) of 5° (6000 km), and moved eastward with a speed of around 20-40 m?s-1 relative to Jupiter’s mean flow. Their lifetime was 90 and 60 days for Y1 and Y2, respectively. In November, both Y1 and Y2 exhibited outbursts of rapidly evolving bright spots emerging from the Y vertex. The Y features were not visible at wavelengths of 255 or 890 nm, which suggests that they were vertically shallow and placed in altitude between the upper equatorial hazes and the main cloud deck. Numerical simulations of the dynamics of the Jovian equatorial region generate Kelvin and Rossby waves, which are similar to those in the Matsuno-Gill model for Earth’s equatorial dynamics, and reproduce the observed cloud morphology and the main properties the main properties of the Y features.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
R. Hueso; M. Delcroix; A. Sánchez-Lavega; S. Pedranghelu; G. Kernbauer; J. McKeon; A. Fleckstein; A. Wesley; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; J. F. Rojas; J. Juaristi
Video observations of Jupiter obtained by amateur astronomers over the past eight years have shown five flashes of light of 1-2 s. The first three of these events occurred on 3 June 2010, 20 August 2010, and 10 September 2012. Previous analyses showed that they were caused by the impact of objects of 5-20 m in diameter, depending on their density, with a released energy comparable to superbolides on Earth of the class of the Chelyabinsk airburst. The most recent two flashes on Jupiter were detected on 17 March 2016 and 26 May 2017 and are analyzed here. We characterize the energy involved together with the masses and sizes of the objects that produced these flashes. The rate of similar impacts on Jupiter provides improved constraints on the total flux of impacts on the planet, which can be compared to the amount of exogenic species detected in the upper atmosphere of Jupiter. We extracted light curves of the flashes and calculated the masses and sizes of the impacting objects. An examination of the number of amateur observations of Jupiter as a function of time allows us to interpret the statistics of these detections. The cumulative flux of small objects (5-20 m or larger) that impact Jupiter is predicted to be low (10-65 impacts per year), and only a fraction of them are potentially observable from Earth (4-25 per year in a perfect survey). More impacts will be found in the next years, with Jupiter opposition displaced toward summer in the northern hemisphere. Objects of this size contribute negligibly to the exogenous species and dust in the stratosphere of Jupiter when compared with the continuous flux from interplanetary dust punctuated by giant impacts. Flashes of a high enough could produce an observable debris field on the planet. We estimate that a continuous search for these impacts might find these events once every 0.4 to 2.6 years.
Icarus | 2012
A. Sánchez-Lavega; Teresa del Río-Gaztelurrutia; M. Delcroix; J. Legarreta; Josep M. Gomez-Forrellad; R. Hueso; Enrique Garcia-Melendo; Santiago Perez-Hoyos; David Barrado-Navascués; Jorge Lillo