3.1. North–South Variation in the Deep Cloud-Top Pressure
The band pass that we use to derive the cloud structure at 4.66 µm contains absorption lines of deuterated methane (CHD). Methane and its isotopologues are well mixed: they do not condense, nor are they destroyed photochemically in Jupiter’s troposphere at the altitudes probed in this study. We therefore assume that CH and CHD have a constant mixing ratio with respect to H in Jupiter’s troposphere. Thus, variations in the strength and shape of the CHD lines between different locations on Jupiter must be due to changes in the cloud structure—not the gas concentration.
Bjoraker et al. [
9] introduced the idea of using CH
D absorption to study Jupiter’s deep cloud structure. Extrema in CH
D were identified, and radiative transfer models were calculated for a Hot Spot in the South Equatorial Belt (SEB) at 17
S and a cloudy region in the South Tropical Zone (STZ) at 32
S. Although measurements were acquired covering 70
S to 70
N in our previous study, it was not practical to model every latitude. The current study extends this analysis by converting the CH
D absorption into the cloud-top pressure for each spatial pixel along the slit, which then can be used to investigate the cloud structure and volatiles at all latitudes rather than being limited to selected locations.
We generated synthetic spectra of Jupiter at 5 µm to model the NIRSPEC data. These spectra were calculated using the Spectrum Synthesis Program (SSP) radiative transfer code first described in [
10] and updated in Bjoraker et al. [
11]. The input temperature profile was obtained from the Galileo Probe [
6]. Although this profile pertains only to the Probe Entry Site, it can be used elsewhere on Jupiter for this study because the shapes of the absorption features at 5 µm are only weakly dependent on the temperature. The line parameters for CH
D and other 5 µm absorbers are from GEISA 2003 [
12]. The parameters for CH
D-H
and CH
D-He broadening have been measured in the lab [
13,
14,
15]. We used a broadening coefficient of 0.0613 cm
/atm (296/T)
for CH
D colliding with a mixture of 86.3% H
and 13.6% helium, as measured by the Galileo Probe [
16]. Pressure-induced H
coefficients were obtained using laboratory measurements at 5 µm in [
17] and the formalism developed in [
18].
Figure 2 shows NIRSPEC spectra at 4.66 µm (2141–2147 cm
) in which the slit was aligned north–south on the central meridian covering Jupiter’s northern hemisphere. Spectra were normalized at 2141.8 cm
to permit comparisons of the line shapes. Note the large change in the appearance of CH
D lines at two different latitudes along the slit. The set of CH
D absorption lines near 2144 cm
are stronger and broader in the NEB at 18.5
N due to a combination of opacity and pressure broadening. We calculated the equivalent width (defined below) of the CH
D feature as a function of spatial pixels over the spectral range from 2143.62 to 2145.10 cm
. This provides important clues to the deep cloud structure.
We also analyzed a nearby Fraunhofer (solar) line due to CO in the Sun. The scattered solar flux is much smaller than Jupiter’s thermal emission in most regions, only becoming visible in the cloudiest areas. Thus, the Fraunhofer line is observed only in zones, such as the EZ at 0.4
N and not in the NEB at 18.5
N. We measured the spatial variation of the strength of this line on Jupiter over the spectral range from 2141.97 to 2142.37 cm
, as shown in
Figure 2. This provides information on the amount of reflected sunlight in the spectrum, as described below. This same Fraunhofer line was used by Bjoraker et al. [
9] to model the STZ at 32
S.
The equivalent width (EW) is a measure of the spectral line strength and is defined as the area of the spectral feature relative to a normalized continuum. The nomenclature arises when considering the width of a rectangular absorption feature from the continuum to zero that has the equivalent area of the spectral line [
19]. The EWs of the CH
D feature and the targeted Fraunhofer line as functions of the spatial pixels were calculated numerically using the trapezoid rule.
In
Figure 3, the EW of the targeted CH
D absorption feature is shown as a function of latitude between 6
S and 66
N along Jupiter’s central meridian. The EW along the line of sight was corrected to normal viewing using the Jovian airmass. Since this feature is optically thick and, therefore, is on the nonlinear portion of the curve of growth, it was necessary to use a power-law relation obtained from our radiative transfer code developed to model Jupiter at 5 µm [
9,
11]. The EW at Jupiter airmass (
) of 1 can be calculated from the EW at values of
between 1 and 1.7 using the following relation:
This power law was evaluated for a cloud-free model atmosphere with an opaque lower boundary at 6.5 bar, simulating a water cloud. In the model, the CH
D mole fraction was 0.18 ppm [
20]; the H
O mole fraction at 6.5 bar was 4 ppm, an intermediate value between the retrieved values ranging between 1.5 and 14 ppm; and PH
was 0.6 ppm [
9]. This model is an approximation as H
O varies spatially on Jupiter, and the wings of these absorption features act as a continuum absorber to affect the strength of the CH
D feature.
As discussed in
Section 3.2, the retrieved cloud-top pressures in belts and Hot Spots should be reliable for H
O mole fractions in the 1–15 ppm range for
p > 5 bar. Regions with low values of CH
D EW are identified as containing water clouds, which, in turn, may also have much larger gaseous H
O abundances (∼1000 ppm) for
p > 5 bar. As a result, this technique may be used to identify the spatial location of water clouds but the cloud-top pressures will be overestimated.
The value of EW corrected for airmass correlates well with the normalized continuum radiance—also shown in
Figure 3. The continuum radiance depends on the transmission of both upper and lower clouds. As shown below, the CH
D EW depends primarily on the opacity of the lower clouds. This suggests that much of the variation of the continuum brightness at 5 µm between belts and zones on Jupiter can be attributed to deep clouds.
The EW (corrected to normal viewing) of the targeted CH
D absorption feature was converted to the cloud-top pressure using our radiative transfer model with different input parameters. A pair of models was constructed for a Jovian airmass of 1 with opaque lower boundaries at 4 and 10 bar. The gas composition for each model was the same as in the airmass study described above. The CH
D EW over the targeted spectral interval was measured for both models. A power law was calculated to interpolate EW values between pressures (p) of 4 and 10 bar.
The corresponding pressure of the opaque lower boundary is shown in
Figure 4 as a function of latitude between 70
S and 66
N. An important point to note is that an opaque boundary at 11 bar, caused primarily by gas opacity, is indistinguishable from a 20 bar cloud boundary. That is, collision-induced absorption due to H
-H
, and H
-He, combined with opacity from the wings of H
O and other molecules limits the line formation region at 4.66 µm to pressures less than 11 bar. Thus, the apparent cloud-top pressure of 11 bar in the NEB and SEB shown in
Figure 4 is not a real cloud. It is a region of maximum CH
D EW, which we interpret as due to the absence of opaque clouds at pressures less than 11 bar at these locations.
This coincides with the highest continuum radiance, as shown in
Figure 3 for the NEB. Although the CH
D EWs are identical for the 11 bar and 20 bar cases, the CH
D EW for a 7 bar cloud is 10% less than for the 11 bar case. The Keck data have sufficient signal-to-noise to distinguish between regions with an opaque cloud at 7 bar and areas that lack deep clouds. However, regions denoted in
Figure 4 as having clouds deeper than 7 bar may have optically thin clouds between 4 and 7 bar rather than, for example, an opaque cloud at 8 bar. Thus, apparent cloud-top pressures >7 bar are shown as dashed lines to indicate thin clouds or, in the case at 11 bar, no deep clouds at all.
The spectrum at 4.66 µm provides valuable information on the ratio of reflected sunlight to thermal emission on Jupiter, which is critical for understanding Jupiter’s cloud structure. We compared the equivalent width of the Fraunhofer line at 2141.8 cm
(Doppler shifted to 2142.2 cm
) with its measured value in the Sun using ATMOS data [
21,
22]. Fraunhofer lines on Jupiter are due to sunlight reflecting off of upper clouds. They are not observed in belts or Hot Spots because these regions are dominated by thermal emission. The ratio of the Jovian EW to the solar value is interpreted as the ratio of reflected sunlight to the sum of the reflected solar and Jovian thermal emission.
This value (shown in
Figure 4) is significant in the EZ and other zones but negligible in the belts. We interpret high values of reflected sunlight as due to two factors: the presence of upper clouds that reflect sunlight (likely NH
ice clouds near 0.6 bar as inferred in the Great Red Spot by Bjoraker et al. [
11]) as well as opaque clouds near 4 bar that block the thermal radiation originating from deeper levels. Reflected sunlight also affects the slope of Jupiter’s continuum between 4.6 and 5.4 µm; however, this effect may be difficult to distinguish from wavelength-dependent cloud absorption.
Figure 4 presents evidence for opaque clouds between 3 and 7 bar, which we interpret as due to water clouds. Water clouds are present at many latitudes, including 65
S, 50
S, 13
S, and 60
N. Other latitudes (30
S, the Equator, 23
N, and 35
N) are inferred to have water clouds that attenuate thermal emission sufficiently to result in a significant amount of reflected sunlight. These include the South Tropical Zone (STZ), Equatorial Zone (EZ), North Tropical Zone (NTZ), and North Temperate Zone (NTeZ). We do not show cloud-top pressures in the EZ and the other zones in
Figure 4.
The presence of reflected sunlight affects the EW of CH
D in a way not described in Equation (
2), which assumes 100% thermal emission. As a result, we cannot rule out the possibility that the zones shown in blue have thick NH
SH and NH
clouds rather than water clouds. However, detailed modeling of the STZ at 32
S by Bjoraker et al. [
9] using the entire 5 µm spectrum, rather than only the EW of CH
D, required an opaque cloud top between 4 and 5 bar—consistent with a water cloud. In addition, by analogy with the Great Red Spot, the zones denoted in blue (with significant reflected sunlight) likely have all three cloud layers as described in [
11].
In
Figure 5, we compare the spectrum of Jupiter at 50
N with three radiative transfer models in which the cloud-top pressure varied between 6 and 9 bar. The best fit to CH
D was provided by the model with the cloud top at 7.5 ± 0.5 bar. In
Figure 6, the pressure of the lower boundary and continuum radiance are shown as functions of latitude between 70
S and 66
N. This is a composite of data from two slit positions that each span one hemisphere. The values of the cloud-top pressure are the same as in
Figure 4. The continuum radiance was normalized to one in each hemisphere. The South Equatorial Belt (SEB) at 20
S exhibits maxima in both continuum radiance and CH
D EW, indicated by an apparent cloud at 11 bar; i.e., this region is thus free of deep clouds. Other latitudes (e.g., 25–70
S) have thick water clouds.
Imaging of Jupiter at 5 µm shows large variations in continuum radiance due to the combined transmission of all clouds at pressures less than 11 bar. However, it has been difficult from 5 µm imaging alone to separate upper clouds (0.5 to 2 bar) from lower clouds (3 to 7 bar). By combining the continuum radiance with CH
D EWs, we can find regions that have upper clouds but lack deep clouds.
Figure 6 provides evidence for upper clouds at 10
S, 19
N, and 28
N. This comes from measured high values of CH
D equivalent width (plotted as a dashed line and interpreted as free of deep clouds) and relatively low continuum radiance.
This low radiance must be due to thick but not opaque upper clouds. The upper clouds may be composed of NH ice, NHSH, or both. Our technique is sensitive to the temperature of the absorbing clouds. Upper clouds with temperatures of 150 to 200 K attenuate thermal emission from below; however, they emit a negligible amount at 5 µm compared with opacity sources at 5 bar where the T is 273 K. Thus, cold upper clouds at 10S (for example) do not affect the EW of CHD, while warm water clouds at 13S do. Observations of Jupiter in reflected sunlight show the presence of upper clouds at latitudes other than the ones highlighted here. The ability to distinguish upper clouds from water clouds using 5 µm data alone is new.
A quantitative estimate of the transmission of upper clouds is only possible at locations with high values of CH
D EWs. At latitudes with low CH
D EW (cloud-top pressures 3 to 7 bar), the continuum radiances are low due to the presence of deep clouds. There is evidence for upper clouds in regions with significant reflected sunlight, as shown in
Figure 4; however, it is difficult to measure the transmittance of each cloud layer separately.
Figure 6 also shows latitudes that exhibit the opposite relation between the continuum brightness and CH
D EW. At 10
N and 50
N, high continuum levels indicate a high combined transmittance for all cloud layers despite the presence of optically thin water clouds between 4 and 7 bars. We interpret this as evidence for exceptionally transparent upper clouds at these locations. Observations at visible and near-IR wavelengths would be needed to test this conclusion.
3.2. North–South Variation in the Ammonia and Water Abundances
Figure 7 shows NIRSPEC spectra at 4.96 µm (2010–2021 cm
) obtained from two slit positions that were aligned north–south on the central meridian to cover Jupiter’s northern and southern hemispheres. The spectra were normalized at 2013.16 cm
to permit the comparison of line shapes. A strong NH
feature at 2014 cm
was used to derive the ammonia abundances.
The weaker NH
line at 2012 cm
was investigated as well. Equivalent widths were calculated for the target line at 2014 cm
using the frequency limits (2013.16 to 2015.37 cm
) shown in
Figure 7. Equivalent widths were also calculated for the weaker NH
line between 2011.62 and 2012.50 cm
. The ammonia mole fraction was retrieved using both frequency ranges for one test case yielding similar abundances; however, ultimately, we used the stronger NH
feature at 2014 cm
for our Jupiter analysis.
Information about Jovian HO comes primarily from the wings of three strong absorption features centered between 2016 and 2020 cm. Their cores coincide with strong telluric lines; however, the Jovian lines are broader than their terrestrial counterparts. The limits for the HO line integration include telluric absorption but this component was subtracted out using the model shown in blue. After several iterations, we used the pair of HO lines between 2017.83 and 2020.24 cm and excluded the strongest line at 2017 cm. The use of this optically thick line pair enabled our radiative transfer model to convert the EW to the HO mole fraction. Note the exceptionally broad wings of the HO feature at 10S between 2015 and 2016 cm and between 2019 and 2020 cm.
A comparison between
Figure 7 and
Figure 4 and
Figure 6 indicates that the extrema in the depths of absorption lines of NH
and H
O do not match the extrema in CH
D, which we used to derive the deep cloud structure. For example, the ammonia absorption is low at 9
N despite the lack of deep clouds at this latitude. This indicates a real depletion in NH
rather than a shorter absorption path length. Similarly, H
O exhibits large changes in the wing absorption between 2015.5 and 2016 cm
between 10
S and 23
S, despite the lack of deep clouds at these locations. This represents a real variation in the mole fraction of H
O between 3 and 6 bar where the targeted absorption features in Jupiter’s atmosphere sound, as discussed below.
In
Figure 8, we show the Galileo Probe temperature profile used for all latitudes along with normalized contribution functions for the targeted absorption lines in this study. Contribution functions for each molecule were calculated for three different abundances of H
O: 4, 47, and 1000 ppm for
p > 5 bar. The retrieved parameters in this study assumed 4 ppm H
O, which provided a better fit to the targeted H
O line pair in belts and Hot Spots. A value of 47 ppm was investigated to match the Galileo Probe value measured at 11 bar [
23]. This value was assumed in our previous study [
9].
Using this HO abundance instead of 4 ppm shifts each contribution to higher altitudes or to lower pressures by 0.5 to 1 bar. The largest change occurs for a deep value of 1000 ppm HO. Contribution functions peak for CHD, NH, and HO at 5 bar, 4 bar, and 3 bar, respectively. As a result, low values of CHD equivalent width may still be used to identify the spatial locations of water clouds. However, the retrieved cloud-top pressures in these regions will be overestimated if water clouds are accompanied by large values of gaseous HO below their cloud tops, as is likely to be the case. Since the retrieved NH and HO mole fractions depend on the derived cloud-top pressure, the values reported below in regions with water clouds will be underestimated.
All contribution functions pertain to a cloud-free model atmosphere at normal incidence with an opaque boundary at 10 bar. For our assumed HO abundance of 4 ppm for p > 5 bar, both NH and HO peak near 6 bar, while CHD exhibits a peak near 8 bar. These functions will shift to lower pressures at higher emission angles and after the inclusion of the optically thin cloud opacity. An opaque cloud truncates each function at the designated cloud pressure. The atmospheric profiles in our model are truncated at this altitude, and an opaque “surface” temperature equivalent is inserted.
The relation between NH
EW and NH
mole fraction was established by modeling regions at 50
N and at 56
S (not shown), using our radiative transfer code. These latitudes were chosen to avoid strong gradients in the cloud-top pressure or extreme heterogeneity, as in the NEB. The Jovian airmass at 50
N was 1.68, and the deep cloud-top pressure was 7.5 bar, derived from CH
D as shown in
Figure 5. The best fit model to this latitude required 190 ± 20 ppm NH
, as shown in
Figure 9. This fit made use of NH
absorption features at 2010.4 and 2012.0 cm
, in addition to the target line at 2014.2 cm
. This value is in excellent agreement with the NH
abundance at this latitude derived from microwave observations of Jupiter using the Very Large Array (VLA) [
24].
The ammonia mole fractions at all locations were obtained using three power laws to convert measured EWs to NH mole fractions. This required three steps. First, the EW at the observed Jovian airmass was converted to a value for the unit airmass (emission angle of 0). The airmass power law was obtained by calculating the EWs for synthetic spectra with 215 ppm NH, cloud-top pressure of 6.8 bar, and Jovian airmasses of 1.0 and 1.7. The latter case matches the conditions for a Jupiter spectrum at 56S and is similar to conditions at 50N at the same airmass. Next, a pressure power law was obtained by calculating the EWs for synthetic spectra with 215 ppm NH, airmass of 1, and cloud-top pressures of 4 and 10 bar. Using the measured EWs for NH converted to unit airmass, the cloud-top pressures derived from CHD, and the pressure power law, we calculated the NH EW for a cloud-top pressure of 6.5 bar.
In the last step, a mole fraction power law was obtained by calculating the EWs for synthetic spectra with airmass of 1, a cloud-top pressure of 6.5 bar, and NH mole fractions of 200 and 340 ppm. Finally, the measured EW for each spatial pixel, after conversion to the unit airmass and a cloud-top pressure of 6.5 bar, was converted to the NH mole fraction.
In
Figure 10, we compare the derived NH
mole fractions for Jupiter’s northern hemisphere using two frequency ranges covering the weak 2012 cm
line and the strong NH
line at 2014 cm
. Both frequency ranges have their own set of three power laws. Most latitudes have NH
in the 150–300 ppm range as measured above the top of an opaque lower cloud except for a significant depletion in the NEB near 10
N. We find similar spatial variations in NH
mole fractions using the two different spectral ranges.
This figure illustrates that the accuracy of our retrieved NH is not solely determined by the S/N ratio, which is high for all spatial pixels. Instead, it depends on systematic factors, such as the accuracy of the power laws, the choice of continuum frequencies, the degree of blending with other molecules, and the fraction of reflected sunlight. The mole fractions derived from both NH features critically depend on the cloud pressures derived from CHD. In general, the spatial variation of NH should be robust as it is based on the measured equivalent widths.
The absolute NH abundances, however, are model-dependent with the largest uncertainty in regions with HO clouds. The ammonia abundances are not shown in regions where the fraction of reflected sunlight exceeds 0.1. Ultimately, we adopted values derived from the strong NH feature at 2014 cm. The difference between the two models is a better indication of the retrieval error than the Keck signal-to-noise ratio, which is high at all latitudes.
In
Figure 11, we show the mole fraction of NH
as a function of latitude between 70
S and 66
N. All values pertain to a column above an opaque lower boundary, denoted as the cloud-top pressure, derived from CH
D. The vertical profile is constant for
p > 0.7 bar and follows the saturated value at
p < 0.7 bar. The retrieved abundances are in the 150–300 ppm range, except for the NEB. There is a strong latitudinal gradient in NH
from a minimum of 90 ppm at 10
N to 200 ppm at 20
N.
There is evidence for a decrease in NH
in the NEB for
p < 1.8 bar from the infrared spectra at 5.32 µm [
25]. Thus, the NH
values at 10 bar in the NEB reported here may be slightly underestimated by using a constant with altitude mole fraction for
p > 0.7 bar. The ammonia mole fraction is enhanced at 13
S in the SEB Outbreak region. As discussed earlier, the retrieved abundance of NH
in regions with water clouds, such as the SEB Outbreak region, is likely underestimated.
Figure 12 compares the retrieved H
O and NH
mole fractions, cloud depth, and continuum radiance with HST imaging taken about 3 days prior. The HST false color image of Jupiter was generated using three filters within or adjacent to CH
bands between 727 and 889 nm. The longitude range from 260 to 310
W is a subset of
Figure 1. As in
Figure 1, the slit location is not constant at 280
W but varies with latitude due to advection by zonal winds between the time of the Hubble image and the NIRSPEC data.
Deep clouds appear red in this image. Of particular interest is the fact that the NIRSPEC slit sampled the SEB Outbreak region, which appears as a mushroom-shaped cloud near 15
S. This is discussed in detail in
Section 3.3.
We calculated models for three abundances of H
O at 50
N, as shown in
Figure 13. The best fit, 3.0 ± 0.3 ppm for
p > 2.5 bar, made use of a strong H
O absorption feature at 2016.8 cm
in addition to the target line pair near 2018 and 2019 cm
. We also plot the retrieved mole fractions of H
O as a function of latitude between 70
S and 66
N (
Figure 14). The vertical profile of H
O is assumed to be constant for
p > 2.5 bar and following a saturated profile at lower pressures. The retrieved abundances for three latitudes and their vertical profiles are shown in
Figure 15. In regions without water clouds, gaseous H
O ranges from 1.5 ppm at 22
S to 7 ppm at 10
S.
The retrieved H
O abundance increases to 14 ppm in regions with water clouds, such as in the SEB Outbreak region at 13
S. However, as discussed earlier, H
O mole fractions retrieved for latitudes with water clouds are not valid in the 4–7 bar pressure range if water clouds are accompanied by ∼1000 ppm gaseous H
O below their cloud tops. Information derived from our targeted H
O line pair would pertain to the 3 bar level, rather than to the pressures shown in
Figure 14. The retrieved values in the belts are significantly sub-saturated, as shown by the dashed line in
Figure 15. Sub-saturation is expected in relatively cloud-free regions, such as the NEB and SEB, but not in regions with water clouds.
There is some degeneracy in our sensitivities to the vertical profile and the deep concentration of water vapor. Green lines in
Figure 15 show two acceptable fits to the 50
N spectrum: our preferred distribution with a constant value of 3 ppm, and one with 47 ppm H
O in the 5–8 bar region, dropping off at pressures <5 bar (maintaining roughly 1% relative humidity at the lower pressures). Both profiles have the same H
O mole fraction at 4 bar. The alternate profile—similar to the one used in our previous study of the SEB [
9]—is consistent with the Galileo Probe Mass Spectrometer (GPMS) concentration of 40 ± 13 ppm [
23].
However, it is important to note that the GPMS was not sensitive to HO concentration at bar, while our spectroscopic retrieval is not sensitive to HO concentration at bar (and limited to even shallower pressures when opaque clouds are present). Although the alternate profile with 47 ppm HO at bar provided an acceptable fit to the spectral data at 50N, the fit was poorer at other latitudes. Our analysis favors lower concentrations in the 5 to 8 bar region. New 5 µm spectra of Jupiter from the James Webb Space Telescope using weak HO absorption lines that are blocked by the Earth’s atmosphere may allow us to distinguish between these two vertical profiles.
The low H
O concentrations in the 5 to 8 bar region are consistent with a widespread deep gradient in water. The GPMS measured increasing H
O from 11 bar to its deepest measurement at 20 bar. Although this deep gradient has been explained in terms of local meteorology in 5 µm Hot Spots, e.g., [
26,
27], the widespread deep ammonia gradient from Juno and VLA microwave observations [
24,
28,
29] suggests dynamical processes that may control the water vapor profile as well. Widespread gradients are needed for our depleted H
O values to increase between 8 bar to the higher values measured by Galileo and implied by the existence of condensation clouds at pressures greater than 3 bar.
3.4. Cloud Variation in the North Equatorial Belt
In addition to our study of the latitudinal variation of Jupiter’s deep clouds, we investigated the North Equatorial Belt, retrieving gas and aerosol properties at two locations centered at 18
N (
Figure 19) and at 8
N (
Figure 20). Highlights at 18
N include the presence of thick water clouds and locally-enhanced water vapor over the optically bright region at 320
W in the HST image, which is likely a cyclonic vortex to the west of a vortex series associated with mesoscale waves [
31,
32]. There is minimal cloud opacity in an optically dark area covering the western half of the slit, which also has low NH
concentration but no prominent anomaly in H
O concentration.
The NEB at 8N exhibits an amazing amount of structure. The eastern half of the slit samples two Hot Spots, which appear deep blue in the HST image because upper tropospheric hazes—which appear blue in CH-band composites—are not depleted in Hot Spots. The western portion includes deep water clouds, unobscured by overlying upper clouds, that appear red in the CH-band composite. This latitude is close to that of the entry site of the Galileo Probe, which relayed in situ data some 21 years earlier.
In
Figure 21, we show the continuum radiance and derived cloud-top pressure in the NEB at 18
N between 300
W and 360
W longitude. Low values of CH
D EW indicate water clouds at 306
W and 321
W. There are no opaque clouds between 325
W and 360
W. However, there is a strong correlation between continuum radiance and apparent cloud-top pressure. We measured minute changes in CH
D EW at the 1% level. This is not due to upper clouds because upper clouds do not affect CH
D EW. This is either due to deep clouds or due to variations in gaseous H
O for
p > 5 bar. If this is a result of cloud opacity, then we interpret this variation in EW to the presence of optically thin water clouds between 4 and 7 bar rather than opaque clouds between 8 and 10 bar.
In
Figure 22, we show a heterogeneous portion of the NEB at 8
N near the latitude of the Galileo Probe entry site. There is evidence for Hot Spots, water clouds, and upper clouds at different longitudes between 200
W and 270
W. From imaging studies Hot Spots with cloudy regions in between them are expected; however, this is the first study using 5 µm data alone to distinguish between water clouds and upper (NH
or NH
SH) clouds in this region.
Figure 19.
The retrieved properties near 18
N in the North Equatorial Belt, compared with HST imaging. Panel (
A) shows the three filters used by HST, the location of the slit, and the presence of three vortices on Jupiter. Features marked A and C resemble anticyclonic and cyclonic vortices associated with mesoscale waves in studies of visible light and 5 µm imaging data in the 2017 timeframe [
31,
32]. The possible cyclone near 320
W covered the full width of the NIRSPEC slit, and is characterized by relatively high amounts of water vapor and deep cloud opacity (panels (
D,
E)). The western portion of the slit footprint covers a region of low cloud reflectivity in the HST imaging data, marked with a green bracket. This region was associated with high continuum radiance (panel (
B)), the lowest NH
concentration (panel (
C)), and very low deep-cloud opacity (panels (
E,
F)). The water abundance in the low-reflectivity region did not appear anomalously low (panel (
D)). The longitudes of the retrieved properties shown here were adjusted using the zonal wind profile [
7] to match positions in the HST maps acquired about 3 days before the Keck spectra, while the longitudes of the retrieved properties in
Figure 21,
Figure 23 and
Figure 24 differ because they are shown at the time of observation.
Figure 19.
The retrieved properties near 18
N in the North Equatorial Belt, compared with HST imaging. Panel (
A) shows the three filters used by HST, the location of the slit, and the presence of three vortices on Jupiter. Features marked A and C resemble anticyclonic and cyclonic vortices associated with mesoscale waves in studies of visible light and 5 µm imaging data in the 2017 timeframe [
31,
32]. The possible cyclone near 320
W covered the full width of the NIRSPEC slit, and is characterized by relatively high amounts of water vapor and deep cloud opacity (panels (
D,
E)). The western portion of the slit footprint covers a region of low cloud reflectivity in the HST imaging data, marked with a green bracket. This region was associated with high continuum radiance (panel (
B)), the lowest NH
concentration (panel (
C)), and very low deep-cloud opacity (panels (
E,
F)). The water abundance in the low-reflectivity region did not appear anomalously low (panel (
D)). The longitudes of the retrieved properties shown here were adjusted using the zonal wind profile [
7] to match positions in the HST maps acquired about 3 days before the Keck spectra, while the longitudes of the retrieved properties in
Figure 21,
Figure 23 and
Figure 24 differ because they are shown at the time of observation.
Figure 20.
The retrieved properties near 8
N in the North Equatorial Belt. Two Hot Spots (marked in panel (
A)), which were also described in Fletcher et al. [
33], are generally associated with very low deep-cloud opacity and low volatile concentrations, although the distribution of H
O and NH
vapor within the Hot Spots differs. Panels (
B–
F) denote the same parameters as in
Figure 19. There is a strong correspondence between the locations of deep clouds identified in imaging data by their high continuum/727-nm ratios (red color in panel (
A)), and deep clouds identified in the spectral data by their narrow CH
D EW (retrieved moderate to low thick cloud pressure levels in panel (
E)). The longitudes of the retrieved properties shown here were adjusted using the zonal wind profile [
7] to match the positions in the HST maps acquired about 3 days before the Keck spectra, while the longitudes of retrieved properties in
Figure 22,
Figure 25, and
Figure 26 differ because they are shown at the time of observation.
Figure 20.
The retrieved properties near 8
N in the North Equatorial Belt. Two Hot Spots (marked in panel (
A)), which were also described in Fletcher et al. [
33], are generally associated with very low deep-cloud opacity and low volatile concentrations, although the distribution of H
O and NH
vapor within the Hot Spots differs. Panels (
B–
F) denote the same parameters as in
Figure 19. There is a strong correspondence between the locations of deep clouds identified in imaging data by their high continuum/727-nm ratios (red color in panel (
A)), and deep clouds identified in the spectral data by their narrow CH
D EW (retrieved moderate to low thick cloud pressure levels in panel (
E)). The longitudes of the retrieved properties shown here were adjusted using the zonal wind profile [
7] to match the positions in the HST maps acquired about 3 days before the Keck spectra, while the longitudes of retrieved properties in
Figure 22,
Figure 25, and
Figure 26 differ because they are shown at the time of observation.
Figure 21.
The pressure of the lower boundary derived from CH
D (green curve) is shown as a function of longitude in the NEB at 18
N. The continuum radiance is shown in black. Regions with
p > 7 bar (dashed green) do not have opaque clouds; however, they may have optically thin water clouds. Longitudes where
p < 7 bar (e.g., 306
W and 321
W) are interpreted as having opaque water clouds. See
Figure 19 for a comparison with HST images.
Figure 21.
The pressure of the lower boundary derived from CH
D (green curve) is shown as a function of longitude in the NEB at 18
N. The continuum radiance is shown in black. Regions with
p > 7 bar (dashed green) do not have opaque clouds; however, they may have optically thin water clouds. Longitudes where
p < 7 bar (e.g., 306
W and 321
W) are interpreted as having opaque water clouds. See
Figure 19 for a comparison with HST images.
There are two Hot Spots at 222
and 238
, denoted as Hot Spot 2 and Hot Spot 1. They coincide with Dark Formations DF10 and DF11, which were studied a few weeks later at longer wavelengths by Fletcher et al. [
33]. The combination of these two datasets provides strong constraints on the nature of Hot Spots, as discussed in
Section 4.4. Both regions have high continuum radiances and high CH
D EWs. Immediately to their east, there are regions with upper clouds between 214 and 220
and 233–236
. In addition, there are upper clouds near 200
.
Figure 22 also shows opaque water clouds at 230
W, and between 242
and 270
W. Note that there is a red region at 8
N and 272
W in the HST methane-band image displayed in the lower right of
Figure 1 and in
Figure 20. Red indicates more reflected sunlight in a continuum channel (750 nm) between methane bands than at wavelengths where methane absorbs strongly (727 and 889 nm). This provides evidence for deep clouds, although it is difficult to quantify their exact pressure. Zonal winds at 8
N will advect the cloud in the HST image from 272
W to ∼252
W over the 3 day interval between the HST and Keck observations.
This places this feature at a location with low CH
D EW, which supports the interpretation that the red feature in the HST image is, in fact, a water cloud. This is close to the location of plume PL11 observed in [
33]. There is additional evidence for a correlation between red features and areas with low CH
D EW in the SEB outbreak region, as described in
Section 3.3, that helps to validate the use of HST methane-band images to detect water clouds. Clearly, this latitude is heterogeneous; thus, caution must be used to apply the results of the Galileo Probe to other regions on Jupiter, even in the same latitude band.
Figure 22.
The pressure of the lower boundary derived from CH
D (green curve) is shown as a function of longitude in the NEB at 8
N. The continuum radiance is shown in black. Longitudes where
p < 7 bar (e.g., 244
W to 270
W) are interpreted as having opaque water clouds. Upper clouds are present at longitudes with high CH
D EW (dashed green) and low continuum radiance (200
W, 217
W, and 233
W). Hot Spots 1 and 2 are the same features as Dark Formation DF11 and DF10, studied in detail in [
33]. The cloudy region near 252
W corresponds to plume PL11 in the same study. This is also near the area where HST CH
-band imaging shows the presence of deep clouds (see
Figure 1 and
Figure 20).
Figure 22.
The pressure of the lower boundary derived from CH
D (green curve) is shown as a function of longitude in the NEB at 8
N. The continuum radiance is shown in black. Longitudes where
p < 7 bar (e.g., 244
W to 270
W) are interpreted as having opaque water clouds. Upper clouds are present at longitudes with high CH
D EW (dashed green) and low continuum radiance (200
W, 217
W, and 233
W). Hot Spots 1 and 2 are the same features as Dark Formation DF11 and DF10, studied in detail in [
33]. The cloudy region near 252
W corresponds to plume PL11 in the same study. This is also near the area where HST CH
-band imaging shows the presence of deep clouds (see
Figure 1 and
Figure 20).