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Journal of Geophysical Research | 1998

Thermal structure of Jupiter's atmosphere near the edge of a 5‐μm hot spot in the north equatorial belt

Alvin Seiff; Donn B. Kirk; T. C. D. Knight; Richard Young; J. D. Mihalov; Leslie A. Young; Frank S. Milos; Gerald Schubert; Robert C. Blanchard; David H. Atkinson

Thermal structure of the atmosphere of Jupiter was measured from 1029 km above to 133 km below the 1-bar level during entry and descent of the Galileo probe. The data confirm the hot exosphere observed by Voyager (∼900 K at 1 nanobar). The deep atmosphere, which reached 429 K at 22 bars, was close to dry adiabatic from 6 to 16 bars within an uncertainty ∼0.1 K/km. The upper atmosphere was dominated by gravity waves from the tropopause to the exosphere. Shorter waves were fully absorbed below 300 km, while longer wave amplitudes first grew, then were damped at the higher altitudes. A remarkably deep isothermal layer was found in the stratosphere from 90 to 290 km with T ∼ 160 K. Just above the tropopause at 260 mbar, there was a second isothermal region ∼25 km deep with T ∼ 112 K. Between 10 and 1000 mbar, the data substantially agree with Voyager radio occultations. The Voyager 1 equatorial occultation was similar in detail to the present sounding through the tropopause region. The Voyager IRIS average thermal structure in the north equatorial belt (NEB) approximates a smoothed fit to the present data between 0.03 and 400 mbar. Differences are partly a result of large differences in vertical resolution but may also reflect differences between a hot spot and the average NEB. At 15 4 bars, probe descent velocities derived from the data are consistently unsteady, suggesting the presence of large-scale turbulence or gravity waves. However, there was no evidence of turbulent temperature fluctuations >0.12 K. A conspicuous pause in the rate of decrease of descent velocity between 1.1 and 1.35 bars, where a disturbance was also detected by the two radio Doppler experiments, implies strong vertical flow in the cloud seen by the probe nephelometer. At p < 0.6 bar, measured temperatures were ∼3 K warmer than the dry adiabat, possible evidence of radiative warming. This could be associated with a tenuous cloud detected by the probe nephelometer above the 0.51 bar level. For an ammonia cloud to form at this level, the required abundance is ∼0.20 × solar.


Science | 1996

Structure of the Atmosphere of Jupiter: Galileo Probe Measurements

Alvin Seiff; Donn B. Kirk; T. C. D. Knight; J. D. Mihalov; Robert C. Blanchard; Richard E. Young; Gerald Schubert; Ulf von Zahn; Gerald A. Lehmacher; Frank S. Milos; Jerry Wang

Temperatures and pressures measured by the Galileo probe during parachute descent into Jupiters atmosphere essentially followed the dry adiabat between 0.41 and 24 bars, consistent with the absence of a deep water cloud and with the low water content found by the mass spectrometer. From 5 to 15 bars, lapse rates were slightly stable relative to the adiabat calculated for the observed H2/He ratio, which suggests that upward heat transport in that range is not attributable to simple radial convection. In the upper atmosphere, temperatures of >1000 kelvin at the 0.01-microbar level confirmed the hot exosphere that had been inferred from Voyager occultations. The thermal gradient increased sharply to 5 kelvin per kilometer at a reconstructed altitude of 350 kilometers, as was recently predicted. Densities at 1000 kilometers were 100 times those in the pre-encounter engineering model.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 1989

Gravity wave structure between 60 and 90 km inferred from Space Shuttle reentry data

David C. Fritts; Robert C. Blanchard; Lawrence Coy

Abstract Density fluctuations obtained along seven space shuttle reentry tracks are used in this paper to examine the horizontal structure and the vertical distribution of density variance in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere. The tracks lie primarily over open ocean at middle and low latitudes and represent the only measurements of horizontal atmospheric structure at these heights available to date. The density fluctuations are interpreted in terms of gravity wave motions and reveal significant density (and velocity) variance at horizontal scales ranging from ∼10 to 1000 km. Fluctuation amplitudes are used to infer corresponding velocity perturbations and characteristic vertical scales and frequencies of the wave spectrum. Results suggest that the mean velocity variance is smaller over the Pacific ocean than observed over major land masses and that the variance increases with height in a manner consistent with that expected in the presence of wave saturation processes.


Science | 1979

Thermal contrast in the atmosphere of Venus - Initial appraisal from Pioneer Venus probe data

Alvin Seiff; Donn B. Kirk; Richard E. Young; Simon C. Sommer; Robert C. Blanchard; John T. Findlay; G. M. Kelly

The altitude profiles of temperature and pressure measured during the descent of the four Pioneer Venus probes show small contrast below the clouds but significant differences within the clouds at altitudes from 45 to 61 kilometers. At 60 kilometers, the probe which entered at 59.3� north latitude sensed temperatures 25 K below those of the lower latitude probes, and a sizable difference persisted down to and slightly below the cloud base. It also sensed pressure below those of the other probes by as much as 49 millibars at a mean pressure of 200 millibars. The measured pressure differences are consistent with cyclostrophic balance of zonal winds ranging from 130 � 20 meters per second at 60 kilometers to 60 � 17 meters per second at 40 kilometers, with evidence in addition of a nonaxisymmetric component of the winds. The clouds were found to be 10 to 20 K warmer than the extended profiles of the lower atmosphere, and the middle cloud is convectively unstable. Both phenomena are attributed to the absorption of thermal radiation from below. Above the clouds, in the lower stratosphere, the lapse rate decreases abruptly to 3.5 K per kilometer, and a superimposed wave is evident. At 100 kilometers, the temperature is minimum, with a mean value of about 170 K.


Science | 1979

Structure of the atmosphere of Venus up to 110 kilometers - Preliminary results from the four Pioneer Venus entry probes

Alvin Seiff; Donn B. Kirk; Simon C. Sommer; Richard E. Young; Robert C. Blanchard; David W. Juergens; Joseph E. Lepetich; Peter F. Intrieri; John T. Findlay; John S. Derr

The four Pioneer Venus entry probes transmitted data of good quality on the structure of the atmosphere below the clouds. Contrast of the structure below an altitude of 50 kilometers at four widely separated locations was found to be no more than a few degrees Kelvin, with slightly warmer temperatures at 30� south latitude than at 5� or 60� north. The atmosphere was stably stratified above 15 or 20 kilometers, indicating that the near-adiabatic state is maintained by the general circulation. The profiles move from near-adiabatic toward radiative equilibrium at altitudes above 40 kilometers. There appears to be a region of vertical convection above the dense cloud deck, which lies at 47.5 to 49 kilometers and at temperature levels near 360 K. The atmosphere is nearly isothermal around 100 kilometers (175 to 180 K) and appears to exhibit a sizable temperature wave between 60 and 70 kilometers. This is where the 4-day wind is believed to occur. The temperature wave may be related to some of the wavelike phenomena seen in Mariner 10 ultraviolet photographs.


Nature | 1997

Wind speeds measured in the deep jovian atmosphere by the Galileo probe accelerometers

A. Seiff; Robert C. Blanchard; T. C. D. Knight; Gerald Schubert; D. B. Kirk; David H. Atkinson; J. D. Mihalov; R. E. Young

The atmosphere of Jupiter has a complex circulation which, until recently, has been observable only at the cloud tops,; the mechanisms driving the winds, and the nature of the interior circulation, remained unknown. Recent analyses of the radio signal from the Galileo probe, obtained during its descent into the jovian atmosphere, have suggested a vigorous interior circulation below the 4-bar level. Here we report an independent measurement of the winds below the cloud tops, making use of the data obtained by the two accelerometers on the descending probe. We find evidence for two distinct wind regimes, in general agreement with the Doppler radio measurements: a region of wind shear between 1 and 4 bar, where the wind speed increases dramatically with depth; and then a region of constant high-velocity winds down to at least the 17-bar level.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 1993

Gravity Wave and Tidal Structures between 60 and 140 km Inferred from Space Shuttle Reentry Data

David C. Fritts; Ding-Yi Wang; Robert C. Blanchard

Abstract This study presents an analysis of density measurements made using high-resolution accelerometers aboard several space shuttles at altitudes from 60 to 140 km during reentry into the earths atmosphere. The observed density fluctuations are interpreted in terms of gravity waves and tides and provide evidence of the importance of such motions well into the thermosphere. Height profiles of fractional density variance reveal that wave amplitudes increase at a rate consistent with observations at lower levels up to ∼90 km. The rate of amplitude growth decreases at greater heights, however, and appears to cease above ∼110 km. Wave amplitudes are nevertheless large at these heights and suggest that gravity waves may play an important role in forcing of the lower thermosphere.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1980

Measurements of thermal structure and thermal contrasts in the atmosphere of Venus and related dynamical observations: Results From the four Pioneer Venus Probes

Alvin Seiff; Donn B. Kirk; Richard Young; Robert C. Blanchard; John T. Findlay; G. M. Kelly; Simon C. Sommer


Science | 1997

Thermal Structure of Jupiter's Upper Atmosphere Derived from the Galileo Probe

Alvin Seiff; Donn B. Kirk; T. C. D. Knight; Leslie A. Young; Frank S. Milos; Ethiraj Venkatapathy; J. D. Mihalov; Robert C. Blanchard; Richard Young; Gerald Schubert


Archive | 1996

New results of Galileo probe atmosphere structure experiment

Alvin Seiff; David Kirk; T. C. D. Knight; Richard E. Young; Gerald Schubert; Robert C. Blanchard; Del Atkinson; J. D. Mihalov

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Alvin Seiff

San Jose State University

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T. C. D. Knight

The Aerospace Corporation

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