Ammonia in Jupiter's troposphere from high-resolution 5- m spectroscopy

Abstract

Jupiter's tropospheric ammonia (NH3) abundance is studied using spatially-resolved 5- m observations from CRIRES, a high resolution spectrometer at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope. The high resolving power (R=96,000) allows the line shapes of three NH3 absorption features to be resolved. We find that within the 1--4 bar pressure range, the NH3 abundance decreases with altitude. The instrument slit was aligned north-south along Jupiter's central meridian, allowing us to search for latitudinal variability. There is considerable uncertainty in the large-scale latitudinal variability, as the increase in cloud opacity in zones compared to belts can mask absorption features. However, we do find evidence for a strong NH3 enhancement at 4--6N, consistent with a localised `ammonia plume' on the southern edge of Jupiter's North Equatorial Belt.

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