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The water abundance in Jupiter's equatorial zone

Authors :
Li, Cheng
Ingersoll, Andrew
Bolton, Scott
Levin, Steven
Janssen, Michael
Atreya, Sushil
Lunine, Jonathan
Steffes, Paul
Brown, Shannon
Guillot, Tristan
Allison, Michael
Arballo, John
Bellotti, Amadeo
Adumitroaie, Virgil
Gulkis, Samuel
Hodges, Amoree
Li, Liming
Misra, Sidharth
Orton, Glenn
Oyafuso, Fabiano
Santos-Costa, Daniel
Waite, Hunter
Zhang, Zhimeng
Source :
Nature Astronomy (2020): 1-8
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Oxygen is the most common element after hydrogen and helium in Jupiter's atmosphere, and may have been the primary condensable (as water ice) in the protoplanetary disk. Prior to the Juno mission, in situ measurements of Jupiter's water abundance were obtained from the Galileo Probe, which dropped into a meteorologically anomalous site. The findings of the Galileo Probe were inconclusive because the concentration of water was still increasing when the probe died. Here, we initially report on the water abundance in the equatorial region, from 0 to 4 degrees north latitude, based on 1.25 to 22 GHz data from Juno Microwave radiometer probing approximately 0.7 to 30 bars pressure. Because Juno discovered the deep atmosphere to be surprisingly variable as a function of latitude, it remains to confirm whether the equatorial abundance represents Jupiter's global water abundance. The water abundance at the equatorial region is inferred to be $2.5_{-1.6}^{+2.2}\times10^3$ ppm, or $2.7_{-1.7}^{+2.4}$ times the protosolar oxygen elemental ratio to H (1$\sigma$ uncertainties). If reflective of the global water abundance, the result suggests that the planetesimals formed Jupiter are unlikely to be water-rich clathrate hydrates.<br />Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Nature Astronomy (2020): 1-8
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2012.10305
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-020-1009-3