S. Stefani
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Featured researches published by S. Stefani.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
A. Mura; A. Adriani; F. Altieri; J. E. P. Connerney; S. J. Bolton; Maria Luisa Moriconi; Jean-Claude Gérard; W. S. Kurth; B. M. Dinelli; F. Fabiano; F. Tosi; Sushil K. Atreya; Fran Bagenal; G. R. Gladstone; Candice J. Hansen; Steven M. Levin; B. H. Mauk; D. J. McComas; G. Sindoni; G. Filacchione; A. Migliorini; D. Grassi; Giuseppe Piccioni; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; D. Turrini; S. Stefani; M. Amoroso; A. Olivieri
The Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) is an imager/spectrometer on board NASA/Juno mission for the study of the Jovian aurorae. The first results of JIRAMs imager channel observations of the H3+ infrared emission, collected around the first Juno perijove, provide excellent spatial and temporal distribution of the Jovian aurorae, and show the morphology of the main ovals, the polar regions, and the footprints of Io, Europa and Ganymede. The extended Io “tail” persists for ~3 hours after the passage of the satellite flux tube. Multi-arc structures of varied spatial extent appear in both main auroral ovals. Inside the main ovals, intense, localized emissions are observed. In the southern aurora, an evident circular region of strong depletion of H3+ emissions is partially surrounded by an intense emission arc. The southern aurora is brighter than the north one in these observations. Similar, probably conjugate emission patterns are distinguishable in both polar regions.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
D. Grassi; A. Adriani; A. Mura; B. M. Dinelli; G. Sindoni; D. Turrini; G. Filacchione; A. Migliorini; M. L. Moriconi; F. Tosi; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; F. Altieri; F. Fabiano; Giuseppe Piccioni; S. Stefani; Sushil K. Atreya; Jonathan I. Lunine; Glenn S. Orton; Andrew P. Ingersoll; S. J. Bolton; Steven M. Levin; J. E. P. Connerney; A. Olivieri; M. Amoroso
The Jupiter InfraRed Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) instrument on board the Juno spacecraft performed observations of two bright Jupiter hot spots around the time of the first Juno pericenter passage on 27 August 2016. The spectra acquired in the 4–5 µm spectral range were analyzed to infer the residual opacities of the uppermost cloud deck as well as the mean mixing ratios of water, ammonia, and phosphine at the approximate level of few bars. Our results support the current view of hot spots as regions of prevailing descending vertical motions in the atmosphere but extend this view suggesting that upwelling may occur at the southern boundaries of these structures. Comparison with the global ammonia abundance measured by Juno Microwave Radiometer suggests also that hot spots may represent sites of local enrichment of this gas. JIRAM also identifies similar spatial patterns in water and phosphine contents in the two hot spots.
Nature | 2018
A. Adiani; A. Mura; G. S. Orton; Candice J. Hansen; F. Altieri; Maria Luisa Moriconi; John H. Rogers; G. Eischstädt; Thomas W. Momary; Andrew P. Ingersoll; G. Filacchione; G. Sindoni; Fachreddin Tabataba-Vakili; B. M. Dinelli; F. Fabiano; S. J. Bolton; J. E. P. Connerney; Sushil K. Atreya; Jonathan I. Lunine; F. Tosi; A. Migliorini; D. Grassi; G. Piccioni; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; C. Plainaki; A. Olivieri; Morgan E O'Neill; D. Turrini; S. Stefani
The familiar axisymmetric zones and belts that characterize Jupiter’s weather system at lower latitudes give way to pervasive cyclonic activity at higher latitudes. Two-dimensional turbulence in combination with the Coriolis β-effect (that is, the large meridionally varying Coriolis force on the giant planets of the Solar System) produces alternating zonal flows. The zonal flows weaken with rising latitude so that a transition between equatorial jets and polar turbulence on Jupiter can occur. Simulations with shallow-water models of giant planets support this transition by producing both alternating flows near the equator and circumpolar cyclones near the poles. Jovian polar regions are not visible from Earth owing to Jupiter’s low axial tilt, and were poorly characterized by previous missions because the trajectories of these missions did not venture far from Jupiter’s equatorial plane. Here we report that visible and infrared images obtained from above each pole by the Juno spacecraft during its first five orbits reveal persistent polygonal patterns of large cyclones. In the north, eight circumpolar cyclones are observed about a single polar cyclone; in the south, one polar cyclone is encircled by five circumpolar cyclones. Cyclonic circulation is established via time-lapse imagery obtained over intervals ranging from 20 minutes to 4 hours. Although migration of cyclones towards the pole might be expected as a consequence of the Coriolis β-effect, by which cyclonic vortices naturally drift towards the rotational pole, the configuration of the cyclones is without precedent on other planets (including Saturn’s polar hexagonal features). The manner in which the cyclones persist without merging and the process by which they evolve to their current configuration are unknown.
Molecular Physics | 2013
Marcel Snels; S. Stefani; Giuseppe Piccioni
Cavity ring-down measurements have been performed on sulphur hexafluoride, in order to determine the extinction in the pressure range from 0 to 20 bar at 20°C (293 K), by using a tunable continuous wave distributed feedback diode laser emitting around 1180 nm. The cavity loss rate has been found to have both a linear dependence and a quadratic dependence on the gas density. While the linear component has been identified with the Rayleigh scattering, the quadratic component is likely due to collision-induced processes. The Rayleigh scattering cross section at 1180 nm has been determined as (1.25 ± 0.18) × 10−27 cm2 and has been compared with Rayleigh scattering cross sections measured in the deep-ultraviolet and visible spectral region.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
D. Grassi; A. Adriani; Maria Luisa Moriconi; A. Mura; Fachreddin Tabataba-Vakili; A. P. Ingersoll; Glenn S. Orton; Candice J. Hansen; F. Altieri; G. Filacchione; G. Sindoni; B. M. Dinelli; F. Fabiano; S. J. Bolton; Steven M. Levin; Sushil K. Atreya; Jonathan I. Lunine; Thomas W. Momary; F. Tosi; A. Migliorini; G. Piccioni; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; C. Plainaki; A. Olivieri; D. Turrini; S. Stefani; R. Sordini; M. Amoroso
We present wind speeds at the ~ 1 bar level at both Jovian polar regions inferred from the 5-μm infrared images acquired by the Jupiter InfraRed Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) instrument on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Juno spacecraft during its fourth periapsis (2 February 2017). We adopted the criterion of minimum mean absolute distortion (Gonzalez & Woods, 2008) to quantify the motion of cloud features between pairs of images. The associated random error on speed estimates is 12 m/s in the northern polar region and 9.8 m/s at the south. Assuming that polar cyclones described by Adriani et al. (2018, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature25491) are in rigid motion with respect to System III, tangential speeds in the interior of the vortices increase linearly with distance from the center. The annulus of maximum speed for the main circumpolar cyclones is located at approximatively 1,000 km from their centers, with peak cyclonic speeds typically between 80 and 110 m/s and ~50 m/s in at least two cases. Beyond the annulus of maximum speed, tangential speed decreases inversely with the distance from the center within the Southern Polar Cyclone and somewhat faster within the Northern Polar Cyclone. A few small areas of anticyclonic motions are also identified within both polar regions.
Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radiative Transfer | 2011
H. Tran; C. Boulet; S. Stefani; Marcel Snels; Giuseppe Piccioni
Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy & Radiative Transfer | 2013
S. Stefani; Giuseppe Piccioni; Marcel Snels; D. Grassi; A. Adriani
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
A. Adriani; A. Mura; Maria Luisa Moriconi; B. M. Dinelli; F. Fabiano; F. Altieri; G. Sindoni; S. J. Bolton; J. E. P. Connerney; Sushil K. Atreya; Fran Bagenal; J.-C. Gérard; G. Filacchione; F. Tosi; A. Migliorini; D. Grassi; Giuseppe Piccioni; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; G. R. Gladstone; Candice J. Hansen; W. S. Kurth; S. M. Levin; B. H. Mauk; D. J. McComas; A. Olivieri; D. Turrini; S. Stefani; M. Amoroso
Geophysical Research Letters | 2017
B. M. Dinelli; F. Fabiano; A. Adriani; F. Altieri; M. L. Moriconi; A. Mura; G. Sindoni; G. Filacchione; F. Tosi; A. Migliorini; D. Grassi; Giuseppe Piccioni; R. Noschese; A. Cicchetti; S. J. Bolton; J. E. P. Connerney; Sushil K. Atreya; Fran Bagenal; G. R. Gladstone; Candice J. Hansen; W. S. Kurth; S. Levin; B. H. Mauk; D. J. McComas; Jean-Claude Gérard; D. Turrini; S. Stefani; M. Amoroso; A. Olivieri
Planetary and Space Science | 2014
Marcel Snels; S. Stefani; D. Grassi; Giuseppe Piccioni; A. Adriani