Jupiter's North Equatorial Belt expansion and thermal wave activity ahead of Juno's arrival
Abstract
The dark colors of Jupiter's North Equatorial Belt (NEB, 7-17°N) appeared to expand northward into the neighboring zone in 2015, consistent with a 3-5 year cycle. Inversions of thermal-IR imaging from the Very Large Telescope revealed a moderate warming and reduction of aerosol opacity at the cloud tops at 17-20°N, suggesting subsidence and drying in the expanded sector. Two new thermal waves were identified during this period: (i) an upper tropospheric thermal wave (wave number 16-17, amplitude 2.5 K at 170 mbar) in the mid-NEB that was anticorrelated with haze reflectivity; and (ii) a stratospheric wave (wave number 13-14, amplitude 7.3 K at 5 mbar) at 20-30°N. Both were quasi-stationary, confined to regions of eastward zonal flow, and are morphologically similar to waves observed during previous expansion events.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- July 2017
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1708.05179
- Bibcode:
- 2017GeoRL..44.7140F
- Keywords:
-
- Jupiter;
- atmospheres;
- dynamics;
- chemistry;
- infrared;
- remote sensing;
- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 28 pages, 15 figures, published in Geophysical Research Letters