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Dive into the research topics where Lawrence A. Sromovsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Lawrence A. Sromovsky.


Science | 1989

Voyager 2 at Neptune: Imaging Science Results

Bradford A. Smith; L. A. Soderblom; Donald J. Banfield; c. Barnet; A. T. Basilevsky; R. F. Beebe; K. Bollinger; Joseph M. Boyce; Andre Brahic; Geoffrey Briggs; Robert H. Brown; Christopher F. Chyba; Stewart A. Collins; Allan F. Cook; David Crisp; Steven K. Croft; Dale P. Cruikshank; Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; G. E. Danielson; Merton E. Davies; E. De Jong; Luke Dones; David Godfrey; J. Goguen; I. Grenier; V. R. Haemmerle; Heidi B. Hammel; Carl J. Hansen; c. P. Helfenstein; C. Howell

Voyager 2 images of Neptune reveal a windy planet characterized by bright clouds of methane ice suspended in an exceptionally clear atmosphere above a lower deck of hydrogen sulfide or ammonia ices. Neptunes atmosphere is dominated by a large anticyclonic storm system that has been named the Great Dark Spot (GDS). About the same size as Earth in extent, the GDS bears both many similarities and some differences to the Great Red Spot of Jupiter. Neptunes zonal wind profile is remarkably similar to that of Uranus. Neptune has three major rings at radii of 42,000, 53,000, and 63,000 kilometers. The outer ring contains three higher density arc-like segments that were apparently responsible for most of the ground-based occultation events observed during the current decade. Like the rings of Uranus, the Neptune rings are composed of very dark material; unlike that of Uranus, the Neptune system is very dusty. Six new regular satellites were found, with dark surfaces and radii ranging from 200 to 25 kilometers. All lie inside the orbit of Triton and the inner four are located within the ring system. Triton is seen to be a differentiated body, with a radius of 1350 kilometers and a density of 2.1 grams per cubic centimeter; it exhibits clear evidence of early episodes of surface melting. A now rigid crust of what is probably water ice is overlain with a brilliant coating of nitrogen frost, slightly darkened and reddened with organic polymer material. Streaks of organic polymer suggest seasonal winds strong enough to move particles of micrometer size or larger, once they become airborne. At least two active plumes were seen, carrying dark material 8 kilometers above the surface before being transported downstream by high level winds. The plumes may be driven by solar heating and the subsequent violent vaporization of subsurface nitrogen.


Applied Optics | 1988

Radiometric calibration of IR Fourier transform spectrometers: solution to a problem with the High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder

Henry E. Revercomb; Henry Buijs; H. B. Howell; Daniel D. LaPorte; William L. Smith; Lawrence A. Sromovsky

A calibrated Fourier transform spectrometer, known as the High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder (HIS), has been flown on the NASA U-2 research aircraft to measure the infrared emission spectrum of the earth. The primary use-atmospheric temperature and humidity sounding-requires high radiometric precision and accuracy (of the order of 0.1 and 1 degrees C, respectively). To meet these requirements, the HIS instrument performs inflight radiometric calibration, using observations of hot and cold blackbody reference sources as the basis for two-point calibrations at each wavenumber. Initially, laboratory tests revealed a calibration problem with brightness temperature errors as large as 15 degrees C between 600 and 900 cm(-1). The symptom of the problem, which occurred in one of the three spectral bands of HIS, was a source-dependent phase response. Minor changes to the calibration equations completely eliminated the anomalous errors. The new analysis properly accounts for the situation in which the phase response for radiance from the instrument itself differs from that for radiance from an external source. The mechanism responsible for the dual phase response of the HIS instrument is identified as emission from the interferometer beam splitter.


Science | 1986

Voyager 2 in the Uranian system: imaging science results

Bradford A. Smith; Laurence A. Soderblom; R. F. Beebe; D. Bliss; Joseph M. Boyce; A. Brahic; Geoffrey Briggs; Robert H. Brown; S. A. Collins; Allan F. Cook; Steven K. Croft; Jeffrey N. Cuzzi; G. E. Danielson; Merton E. Davies; T.E. Dowling; David Godfrey; Candice J. Hansen; M. Camille Harris; Garry E. Hunt; A. P. Ingersoll; Torrence V. Johnson; R. J. Krauss; Harold Masursky; David Morrison; Timothy Owen; J. B. Plescia; James B. Pollack; Carolyn C. Porco; Kathy A. Rages; Carl Sagan

Voyager 2 images of the southern hemisphere of Uranus indicate that submicrometersize haze particles and particles of a methane condensation cloud produce faint patterns in the atmosphere. The alignment of the cloud bands is similar to that of bands on Jupiter and Saturn, but the zonal winds are nearly opposite. At mid-latitudes (-70� to -27�), where winds were measured, the atmosphere rotates faster than the magnetic field; however, the rotation rate of the atmosphere decreases toward the equator, so that the two probably corotate at about -20�. Voyager images confirm the extremely low albedo of the ring particles. High phase angle images reveal on the order of 102 new ringlike features of very low optical depth and relatively high dust abundance interspersed within the main rings, as well as a broad, diffuse, low optical depth ring just inside the main rings system. Nine of the newly discovered small satellites (40 to 165 kilometers in diameter) orbit between the rings and Miranda; the tenth is within the ring system. Two of these small objects may gravitationally confine the e ring. Oberon and Umbriel have heavily cratered surfaces resembling the ancient cratered highlands of Earths moon, although Umbriel is almost completely covered with uniform dark material, which perhaps indicates some ongoing process. Titania and Ariel show crater populations different from those on Oberon and Umbriel; these were probably generated by collisions with debris confined to their orbits. Titania and Ariel also show many extensional fault systems; Ariel shows strong evidence for the presence of extrusive material. About halfof Mirandas surface is relatively bland, old, cratered terrain. The remainder comprises three large regions of younger terrain, each rectangular to ovoid in plan, that display complex sets of parallel and intersecting scarps and ridges as well as numerous outcrops of bright and dark materials, perhaps suggesting some exotic composition.


Advances in Space Research | 1985

Models of the structure of the atmosphere of Venus from the surface to 100 kilometers altitude

A. Seiff; John T. Schofield; Arvydas J. Kliore; F. W. Taylor; Sanjay S. Limaye; Henry E. Revercomb; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; V. V. Kerzhanovich; V.I. Moroz; M.Ya. Marov

From a critical comparison and synthesis of data from the four Pioneer Venus Probes, the Pioneer Venus Orbiter, and the Venera 10, 12, and 13 landers, models of the lower and middle atmosphere of Venus are derived. The models are consistent with the data sets within the measurement uncertainties and established variability of the atmosphere. The models represent the observed variations of state properties with latitude, and preserve the observed static stability. The rationale and the approach used to derive the models are discussed, and the remaining uncertainties are estimated.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1998

Galileo Probe Measurements of Thermal and Solar Radiation Fluxes in the Jovian Atmosphere

Lawrence A. Sromovsky; A. D. Collard; P. M. Fry; G. S. Orton; Mark T. Lemmon; M. G. Tomasko; R. S. Freedman

The Galileo probe net flux radiometer (NFR) measured radiation fluxes in Jupiters atmosphere from about 0.44 to 14 bars, using five spectral channels to separate solar and thermal components. Onboard calibration results confirm that the NFR responded to radiation approximately as expected. NFR channels also responded to a superimposed thermal perturbation, which can be approximately removed using blind channel measurements and physical constraints. Evidence for the expected NH3 cloud was seen in the spectral character of spin-induced modulations of the direct solar beam signals. These results are consistent with an overlying cloud of small NH3 ice particles (0.5–0.75 μm in radius) of optical depth 1.5–2 at 0.5 μm. Such a cloud would have so little effect on thermal fluxes that NFR thermal channels provide no additional constraints on its properties. However, evidence for heating near 0.45 bar in the NFR thermal channels would seem to require either an additional opacity source beyond this small-particle cloud, implying a heterogeneous cloud structure to avoid conflicts with solar modulation results, or a change in temperature lapse rate just above the probe measurements. The large thermal flux levels imply water vapor mixing ratios that are only 6% of solar at 10 bars, but possibly increasing with depth, and significantly subsaturated ammonia at pressures less than 3 bars. If deep NH3 mixing ratios at the probe entry site are 3–4 times ground-based inferences, as suggested by probe radio signal attenuation, then only half as much water is needed to match NFR observations. No evidence of a water cloud was seen near the 5-bar level. The 5-μm thermal channel detected the presumed NH4SH cloud base near 1.35 bars. Effects of this cloud were also seen in the solar channel upflux measurements but not in the solar net fluxes, implying that the cloud is a conservative scatterer of sunlight. The minor thermal signature of this cloud is compatible with particle radii near 3 μm, but it cannot rule out smaller particles. Deeper than about 3 bars, solar channels indicate unexpectedly large absorption of sunlight at wavelengths longer than 0.6 μm, which might be due to unaccounted-for absorption by NH3 between 0.65 and 1.5 μm.


Journal of Applied Meteorology | 1990

GHIS—The GOES High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder

William L. Smith; Henry E. Revercomb; H. B. Howell; H.-L. Huang; Robert O. Knuteson; E. W. Koenig; Daniel D. LaPorte; S. Silverman; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; H. M. Woolf

Abstract A high spectral resolution interferometer sounder (GHIS) has been designed for flight on future geostationary meteorological satellites. It incorporates the measurement principles of an aircraft prototype instrument, which has demonstrated the capability to observe the earth-emitted radiance spectrum with high accuracy. The aircraft results indicate that the theoretical expectation of 1°C temperature and 2°–3°C dewpoint retrieval accuracy will be achieved. The vertical resolution of the water vapor profile appears good enough to enable moisture tracking in numerous vertical layers thereby providing wind profile information as well as thermodynamic profiles of temperature and water vapor.


Advances in Space Research | 1985

Solar and thermal radiation in the Venus atmosphere

V. I. Moroz; A.P. Ekonomov; B.E. Moshkin; H. E. Revercomb; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; John T. Schofield; D. Spänkuch; F. W. Taylor; M.G. Tomasko

Attention is given to the solar and thermal radiation fields of Venus. Direct measurements and the results of numerical models based on direct measurements are presented. Radiation outside the atmosphere is considered with emphasis placed on global energy budget parameters, spectral and angular dependences, spatial distribution, and temporal variations of solar and thermal radiation. Radiation fluxes inside the atmosphere below 90 km are also considered with attention given to the solar flux at the surface, solar and thermal radiation fluxes from 100 km to the surface, and radiative heating and cooling below 100 km.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 1982

Jovian winds from Voyager 2. I - Zonal mean circulation

Sanjay S. Limaye; Henry E. Revercomb; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; R. J. Krauss; D. A. Santek; V. E. Suomi; S. A. Collins; C. C. Avis

Abstract Independent measurements of Jovian cloud motions confirm previously published results on the general structure of Jupiters zonal mean circulation. The new results are based on Voyager 2 images and measurement techniques which are different from those used in previous studies. The latitudes of the zonal jets agree with previous results, but there are some differences in the measured speed of the jets which exceed uncertainty estimates. These differences may be due to differences in sampling strategies. The structure of the zonal mean meridional velocity profile has still not been clearly resolved: mean meridional velocities generally differ from zero by no more than their estimated uncertainty. An analysis of successive measurements of the same cloud targets shows that most of the variance of individual velocity measurements is due to true variability of the winds. In agreement with the previous results the curvature of the zonal velocity profile is consistent with barotropic instability within m...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1981

First Sounding Results from VAS-D

William L. Smith; V. E. Suomi; W. P. Menzel; H. M. Woolf; Lawrence A. Sromovsky; H. E. Revercomb; Christopher M. Hayden; D. N. Erickson; F. R. Mosher

First results are presented from an experiment to sound the atmospheres temperature and moisture distribution from a geostationary satellite. Sounding inferences in clear and partially cloudy conditions have the anticipated accuracy and horizontal and vertical resolutions. Most important is the preliminary indication that small but significant temporal variations of atmospheric temperature and moisture can be observed by the geostationary satellite sounder. Quantitative assessment of the accuracy and meteorological utility of this new sounding capability must await the accumulation of results over the coming months.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1991

Winds of Neptune: Voyager observations of cloud motions

Sanjay S. Limaye; Lawrence A. Sromovsky

High temporal and spatial resolution images acquired from Voyager cameras have been used to measure cloud motions to improve the meridional profile of the zonal mean circulation on Neptune. A wide range of atmospheric periods between 12 and 21 hours is revealed by the average cloud motions, consistent with the previous observations. New observations have expanded latitudinal coverage, improved the determination of streak motions, especially near 30°N, and added statistical weight to latitudes already covered by previous measurements. Both new and earlier observations have been subjected to quality control procedures to reduce dispersion caused by erroneous observations. The resulting data set emphasizes short time intervals to maximize target recognition. Most reliable cloud targets last less than one Neptune rotation, many only a fraction of it. A broad equatorial retrograde jet extends from approximately 50°S to at least 45°N (the northernmost latitude at which discrete cloud features have been seen). A relatively narrow prograde jet of at least 300 m s−1 is found near 70°S. The wind observations have a high degree of variability, some of which is due to variability of motions; but at many latitudes it reflects observation errors arising from rapid evolution of Neptunes clouds. A bias observed in the measured meridional component is most likely due to a small discrepancy between the true rotation pole of Neptune and the pole position used in the data reduction. Zonal motions and morphology suggest the global circulation to be symmetric about the equator.

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Patrick M. Fry

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Sanjay S. Limaye

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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V. E. Suomi

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Heidi B. Hammel

Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy

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Kevin H. Baines

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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H. E. Revercomb

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Henry E. Revercomb

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Glenn S. Orton

California Institute of Technology

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I. de Pater

University of California

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Timothy Edward Dowling

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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