Angular Dependence and Spatial Distribution of Jupiter's Centimeter-Wave Thermal Emission From Juno's Microwave Radiometer
Abstract
NASA's Juno spacecraft has been monitoring Jupiter in 53-day orbits since 2016. Its six-frequency microwave radiometer (MWR) is designed to measure black body emission from Jupiter over a range of pressures from a few tenths of a bar to several kilobars in order to retrieve details of the planet's atmospheric composition, in particular, its ammonia and water abundances. A key step toward achieving this goal is the determination of the latitudinal dependence of the nadir brightness temperature and limb darkening of Jupiter's thermal emission through a deconvolution of the measured antenna temperatures. We present a formulation of the deconvolution as an optimal estimation problem. It is demonstrated that a quadratic expression is sufficient to model the angular dependence of the thermal emission for the data set used to perform the deconvolution. Validation of the model and results from a subset of orbits favorable for MWR measurements is presented over a range of latitudes that cover up to 60° from the equator. A heuristic algorithm to mitigate the effects of nonthermal emission is also described.
- Publication:
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Earth and Space Science
- Pub Date:
- November 2020
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2020E&SS....701254O
- Keywords:
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- deconvolution;
- giant planets;
- Juno;
- Jupiter;
- limb darkening;
- microwave radiometer