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Journal ArticleDOI

Galileo probe measurements of thermal and solar radiation fluxes in the Jovian atmosphere

TLDR
The Galileo probe net flux radiometer (NFR) measured radiation fluxes in Jupiter's atmosphere from about 0.44 to 14 bars, using five spectral channels to separate solar and thermal components.
Abstract
The Galileo probe net flux radiometer (NFR) measured radiation fluxes in Jupiter's atmosphere from about 0.44 to 14 bars, using five spectral channels to separate solar and thermal components. Onboard calibration results confirm that the NFR responded to radiation approximately as expected. NFR channels also responded to a superimposed thermal perturbation, which can be approximately removed using blind channel measurements and physical constraints. Evidence for the expected NH3 cloud was seen in the spectral character of spin-induced modulations of the direct solar beam signals. These results are consistent with an overlying cloud of small NH3 ice particles (0.5-0.75 microns in radius) of optical depth 1.5-2 at 0.5 microns. Such a cloud would have so little effect on thermal fluxes that NFR thermal channels provide no additional constraints on its properties. However, evidence for heating near 0.45 bar in the NFR thermal channels would seem to require either an additional opacity source beyond this small-particle cloud, implying a heterogeneous cloud structure to avoid conflicts with solar modulation results, or a change in temperature lapse rate just above the probe measurements. The large thermal flux levels imply water vapor mixing ratios that are only 6% of solar at 10 bars, but possibly increasing with depth, and significantly subsaturated ammonia at pressures less than 3 bars. If deep NH3 mixing ratios at the probe entry site are 3-4 times ground-based inferences, as suggested by probe radio signal attenuation, then only half as much water is needed to match NFR observations. No evidence of a water cloud was seen near the 5-bar level. The 5-microns thermal channel detected the presumed NH4SH cloud base near 1.35 bars. Effects of this cloud were also seen in the solar channel upflux measurements but not in the solar net fluxes, implying that the cloud is a conservative scatterer of sunlight. The minor thermal signature of this cloud is compatible with particle radii near 3 gm, but it cannot rule out smaller particles. Deeper than about 3 bars, solar channels indicate unexpectedly large absorption of sunlight at wavelengths longer than 0.6 microns, which might be due to unaccounted-for absorption by NH3 between 0.65 and 1.5 microns.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The composition of the Jovian atmosphere as determined by the Galileo probe mass spectrometer.

TL;DR: Analysis of some of the constituents detected suggests that icy planetesimals made significant contributions to the volatile inventory, and (4) a moderate decrease in D/H but no detectable change in (D + 3He)/H in this part of the galaxy during the past 4.6 Gyr.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermal structure of Jupiter's atmosphere near the edge of a 5‐μm hot spot in the north equatorial belt

TL;DR: This article measured the thermal structure of the atmosphere of Jupiter from 1029 km above to 133 km below the 1-bar level during entry and descent of the Galileo probe and confirmed the hot exosphere observed by Voyager (∼900 K at 1 nanobar).
Journal ArticleDOI

Updated Galileo probe mass spectrometer measurements of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur on Jupiter

TL;DR: Folkner et al. as discussed by the authors measured the mixing ratios of H2O, H2S, and NH3 in the deep well-mixed atmosphere of Jupiter and showed that the mixing ratio of NH3 increased with depth, finally reaching we ll-fixed equilibration levels at pressures far greater than the lifting condensation levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn: deep atmospheric composition, cloud structure, vertical mixing, and origin

TL;DR: The current understanding of the composition, vertical mixing, cloud structure and the origin of the atmospheres of Jupiter and Saturn is presented and a much more vigorous vertical mixing in Saturn's middle-upper atmosphere than in Jupiter's is pointed to.
Journal ArticleDOI

Composition and origin of the atmosphere of Jupiter—an update, and implications for the extrasolar giant planets

TL;DR: In this article, the ammonia mixing ratio on Jupiter has now been determined directly from the Galileo probe mass spectrometer (GPMS) data, and its value relative to H 2 (7.1±3.2)×10 −4 in the 9-12 bar region, is found to be similar to the previously reported result inferred from the radio attenuation technique on Galileo.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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