Implications of the ammonia distribution on Jupiter from 1 to 100 bars as measured by the Juno microwave radiometer
Abstract
The latitude-altitude map of ammonia mixing ratio shows an ammonia-rich zone at 0-5°N, with mixing ratios of 320-340 ppm, extending from 40-60 bars up to the ammonia cloud base at 0.7 bars. Ammonia-poor air occupies a belt from 5-20°N. We argue that downdrafts as well as updrafts are needed in the 0-5°N zone to balance the upward ammonia flux. Outside the 0-20°N region, the belt-zone signature is weaker. At latitudes out to ±40°, there is an ammonia-rich layer from cloud base down to 2 bars that we argue is caused by falling precipitation. Below, there is an ammonia-poor layer with a minimum at 6 bars. Unanswered questions include how the ammonia-poor layer is maintained, why the belt-zone structure is barely evident in the ammonia distribution outside 0-20°N, and how the internal heat is transported through the ammonia-poor layer to the ammonia cloud base.
- Publication:
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Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- August 2017
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2017GeoRL..44.7676I
- Keywords:
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- Jupiter;
- Juno;
- microwave;
- giant planet;
- atmosphere;
- dynamics