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Preliminary JIRAM results from Juno polar observations: 3. Evidence of diffuse methane presence in the Jupiter auroral regions

Authors :
M. L. Moriconi
A. Adriani
B. M. Dinelli
F. Fabiano
F. Altieri
F. Tosi
G. Filacchione
A. Migliorini
J. C. G'erard
A. Mura
D. Grassi
G. Sindoni
G. Piccioni
R. Noschese
A. Cicchetti
S. J. Bolton
J. E. P. Connerney
S. K. Atreya
F. Bagenal
G. R. Gladstone
C. Hansen
W. S. Kurth
S. M. Levin
B. H. Mauk
D. J. McComas
D. Turrini
S. Stefani
A. Olivieri
M. Amoroso
M. L. Moriconi
A. Adriani
B. M. Dinelli
F. Fabiano
F. Altieri
F. Tosi
G. Filacchione
A. Migliorini
J. C. G'erard
A. Mura
D. Grassi
G. Sindoni
G. Piccioni
R. Noschese
A. Cicchetti
S. J. Bolton
J. E. P. Connerney
S. K. Atreya
F. Bagenal
G. R. Gladstone
C. Hansen
W. S. Kurth
S. M. Levin
B. H. Mauk
D. J. McComa
D. Turrini
S. Stefani
A. Olivieri
M. Amoroso
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Throughout the first orbit of the NASA Juno mission around Jupiter, the Jupiter InfraRed Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) targeted the northern and southern polar regions several times. The analyses of the acquired images and spectra confirmed a significant presence of methane (CH4) near both poles through its 3.3 μm emission overlapping the H3+ auroral feature at 3.31 μm. Neither acetylene (C2H2) nor ethane (C2H6) have been observed so far. The analysis method, developed for the retrieval of H3+ temperature and abundances and applied to the JIRAM-measured spectra, has enabled an estimate of the effective temperature for methane peak emission and the distribution of its spectral contribution in the polar regions. The enhanced methane inside the auroral oval regions in the two hemispheres at different longitude suggests an excitation mechanism driven by energized particle precipitation from the magnetosphere.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..277dc693bad669292e0eff139000466d