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Saturn’s atmospheric response to the large influx of ring material inferred from Cassini INMS measurements

Authors :
Julianne I. Moses
Zarah L. Brown
Tommi T. Koskinen
Leigh N. Fletcher
Joseph Serigano
Sandrine Guerlet
Luke Moore
J. Hunter Waite
Lotfi Ben-Jaffel
Marina Galand
Joshua M. Chadney
Sarah M. Hörst
James A. Sinclair
Veronique Vuitton
Ingo Müller-Wodarg
Source :
Icarus. 391:115328
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

During the Grand Finale stage of the Cassini mission, organic-rich ring material was discovered to be flowing into Saturn's equatorial upper atmosphere at a surprisingly large rate. Through a series of photochemical models, we have examined the consequences of this ring material on the chemistry of Saturn's neutral and ionized atmosphere. We find that if a substantial fraction of this material enters the atmosphere as vapor or becomes vaporized as the solid ring particles ablate upon atmospheric entry, then the ring-derived vapor would strongly affect the composition of Saturn's ionosphere and neutral stratosphere. Our surveys of Cassini infrared and ultraviolet remote-sensing data from the final few years of the mission, however, reveal none of these predicted chemical consequences. We therefore conclude that either (1) the inferred ring influx represents an anomalous, transient situation that was triggered by some recent dynamical event in the ring system that occurred a few months to a few tens of years before the 2017 end of the Cassini mission, or (2) a large fraction of the incoming material must have been entering the atmosphere as small dust particles less than ~100 nm in radius, rather than as vapor or as large particles that are likely to ablate. Future observations or upper limits for stratospheric neutral species such as HC$_3$N, HCN, and CO$_2$ at infrared wavelengths could shed light on the origin, timing, magnitude, and nature of a possible vapor-rich ring-inflow event.<br />Comment: accepted in Icarus

Details

ISSN :
00191035
Volume :
391
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Icarus
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fb575443d01117d73c79e7931a72eac