Planetary observations with the Tidbinbilla interferometer
Abstract
Radio observations at a wavelength of 13.1 cm of Saturn and Uranus made with the Tidbinbilla interferometer during 1978 and 1979 are summarized. The observations were made with 64-m and 26-m antennas on a 200-m north-south baseline at a bandwidth of 12 MHz with RCP polarization and a primary beamwidth of about 12 arcmin. A flux density of 198 + or - 15 mJy was measured for Saturn, which indicates a surface temperature, corrected for the occulting effect of the rings, of 191 + or - 15 K, in excellent agreement with previous determinations. With the use of a background subtraction technique to remove the local background confusion, Uranus was found to have a flux density of 11.7 + or - 0.8 mJy, indicating a disk-averaged brightness temperature of 255 + or - 18 K. The increase in Uranus brightness temperature over that measured 15 years previously is attributed to variations in temperature or opacity below the cloud tops, or to a reduction in relative ammonia abundance most likely reflecting a change in the aspect of the planet as viewed from earth.
- Publication:
-
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
- Pub Date:
- 1980
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1980PASA....4...72B
- Keywords:
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- Radio Astronomy;
- Radio Interferometers;
- Saturn (Planet);
- Uranus (Planet);
- Background Radiation;
- Centimeter Waves;
- Flux Density;
- Planetary Atmospheres;
- Astronomy