Discovery of a Bright Equatorial Storm on Neptune
Abstract
Images of Neptune, taken with the NIRC2 instrument during testing of the new Twilight Zone observing program at Keck Observatory, revealed an extremely large bright storm system near Neptune's equator. The storm complex is ≈9,000 km across and brightened considerably between June 26 and July 2. Historically, very bright clouds have occasionally been seen on Neptune, but always in the midlatitude regions between ≈15° and ≈60° North or South. Voyager and HST observations have shown that cloud features large enough to dominate near-IR photometry are often "companion" clouds of dark anti-cyclonic vortices similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot, interpreted as orographic clouds. In the past such clouds and their coincident dark vortices often persisted for one up to several years. However, the cloud complex we detect is unique: never before has a bright cloud been seen at, or so close to, the equator. The discovery points to a drastic departure in the dynamics of Neptune's atmosphere from what has been observed for the past several decades. Detections of the complex in multiple NIRC2 filters allows radiative transfer modeling to constrain the cloud's altitude and vertical extent.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.P31D2856M
- Keywords:
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- 6207 Comparative planetology;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS;
- 6255 Neptune;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS;
- 6293 Uranus;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS;
- 6297 Instruments and techniques;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS