Observations of the J = 10 manifold of the pure rotational band of phosphine on Saturn
Abstract
Saturn was observed in the vicinity of the J = 10 manifold of the pure rotational band of phosphine on 1984 July 10 and 12 from NASA's Kuiper Airborne Observatory with the facility far-infrared cooled grating spectrometer. On each night observations of the full disk plus rings were made at 4 to 6 discrete wavelengths which selectively sampled the manifold and the adjacent continuum. The previously reported detection of this manifold is confirmed. After subtraction of the flux due to the rings, the data are compared with disk-averaged models of Saturn. It is found that PH3 must be strongly depleted above the thermal inversion (approx. 70 mbar). The best fitting models consistent with other observational constaints indicate that PH3 is significantly depleted at even deeper atmospheric levels ( or = 500 mbar), implying an eddy diffusion coefficient for Saturn of 10 to the 4 cm sq/sec.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- January 1986
- Bibcode:
- 1986STIN...8618277H
- Keywords:
-
- Phosphines;
- Saturn (Planet);
- Saturn Atmosphere;
- Troposphere;
- Airborne Equipment;
- Atmospheric Composition;
- Gratings (Spectra);
- Infrared Spectroscopy;
- Resolution;
- Astronomy