Jupiter's Multi‐Year Cycles of Temperature and Aerosol Variability From Ground‐Based Mid‐Infrared Imaging

Author:

Antuñano Arrate12ORCID,Fletcher Leigh N.1ORCID,Orton Glenn S.3ORCID,Melin Henrik1ORCID,Donnelly Padraig T.4,Roman Michael T.1ORCID,Sinclair James A.3ORCID,Kasaba Yasumasa5ORCID,Momary Thomas3,Fujiyoshi Takuya6

Affiliation:

1. School of Physics & Astronomy University of Leicester University Road Leicester UK

2. Dpto de Física Aplicada Escuela de Ingeniería de Bilbao UPV/EHU Bilbao Spain

3. Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA USA

4. Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique Sorbonne Université Paris France

5. Tohoku University Sendai Japan

6. Subaru Telescope National Astronomical Observatory of Japan Hilo HI USA

Abstract

AbstractWe use a long‐term record of ground‐based mid‐infrared (7.9–24.5 μm) observations, captured between 1984 and late 2019 from 3‐m and 8‐m class observatories (mainly NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility, ESO's Very Large Telescope, and the Subaru Telescope), to characterize the long‐term, multi‐decade variability of the thermal and aerosol structure in Jupiter's atmosphere. In this study, spectral cubes assembled from images in multiple filters are inverted to provide estimations of stratospheric and tropospheric temperatures and tropospheric aerosol opacity. We find evidence of non‐seasonal and quasi‐seasonal variations of the stratospheric temperatures at 10 mbar, with a permanent hemispherical asymmetry at mid‐latitudes, where the northern mid‐latitudes are overall warmer than southern mid‐latitudes. A correlation analysis between stratospheric and tropospheric temperature variations reveals a moderate anticorrelation between the 10‐mbar and 330‐mbar temperatures at the equator, revealing that upper‐tropospheric equatorial temperatures are coupled to Jupiter’s Equatorial Stratospheric Oscillation. The North and South Equatorial Belts show temporal variability in their aerosol opacity and tropospheric temperatures that are in approximate antiphase with one another, with moderate negative correlations in the North Equatorial Belt and South Equatorial Belt changes between conjugate latitudes at 10°–16°. This long‐term anticorrelation between belts separated by ∼15° is still not understood. Finally we characterize the lag between thermal and aerosol opacity changes at a number of latitudes, finding that aerosol variations tend to lag after thermal variations by around 6 months at multiple latitudes.

Funder

European Research Council

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Eusko Jaurlaritza

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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