58 research outputs found

    Vertical distribution of aerosols and hazes over Jupiter's great red spot and its surroundings in 2016 from HST/WFC3 imaging

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    In this work, we have analyzed images provided by the Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3 (HST/WFC3) in December 2016, with a spectral coverage from the ultraviolet to the near infrared. We have obtained the spectral reflectivity of the GRS and its surroundings, with particular emphasis on selected, dynamically interesting regions. A spectral characterization of the GRS area is performed following two different procedures: (a) in terms of Altitude/Opacity and Color Indices (AOI and CI); (b) by means of automatic spectral classification. We used the NEMESIS radiative transfer suite to retrieve the main atmospheric parameters (e.g., particle vertical and size distributions, refractive indices) that are able to explain the observed spectral reflectivity. The optimal a priori model atmosphere used for the retrievals is obtained from a grid of about 12,000 different atmospheric models, and choosing the one that best fits South Tropical Zone (STrZ) spectra and its observed limb-darkening. We conclude that the spectral reflectivity of the GRS area is well reproduced with the following layout: (a) a stratospheric haze with its base near the 100 mbar level, with optical depths at 900 nm of the order of unity and particles with a size of 0.3 μm; (b) a more vertically extended tropospheric haze, with τ (900 nm) ∼10 down to 500 mbar and micron sized particles. Both haze layers show a stronger short wavelength absorption, and thus both act as chromophores. The altitude difference between clouds tops in the GRS and surrounding areas is ∼10 km

    Color and aerosol changes in Jupiter after a North Temperate Belt disturbance

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    The banded appearance of Jupiter’s atmosphere shows significant changes over time, sometimes even transforming the reflectivity of a whole latitudinal band in a few weeks, and staying for years with an aspect different from the usual one. The origin of some of these disturbances may be associated with the creation and destruction of the chromophore species that provides Jovian clouds their reddish coloration. In this work, we have focused on the North Temperate Belt (NTB) disturbance detected during the second flyby of Juno mission (NASA) on October 2016, as a series of convective storms interacted with the fastest zonal jet on Jupiter at 24N over months and left a quiet belt characterized by an intense red coloration Sánchez-Lavega et al. (2017). In order to determine the corresponding changes in the upper clouds and hazes we have used images taken in 2016 and 2017 with the Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3. Such images were acquired before and after the outbreak, showing an intense color change in a narrow latitude band. The images cover the wavelength range from 250 nm up to the methane absorption band at 890 nm, thus sensitive to a number of atmospheric levels from the lower stratosphere to the upper troposphere where the ammonia condensation cloud is expected to be located. Here we use the radiative transfer suite NEMESIS Irwin et al. (2008) to determine the vertical distribution and properties of the upper hazes that best match the observed dependence of reflectivity with wavelength and geometry. We use two models for the Jovian chromophore: (A) an extended layer whose imaginary refractive index is left as a free parameter; and (B) a concentrated chromophore as in Sromovsky et al. (2017) using the optical properties by Carlson et al. (2016). Both scenarios show an increase in the number of particles responsible for the blue absorption approximately by a factor of 2, and require only small changes in the rest of the atmospheric parameters. We find that, even though results provided by scenario B are also compatible with observations, the limb-darkening is better described by scenario A, where there is also an increase of the particle absorption at the shortest wavelengths. In this work, we also provide an extension of the expected imaginary refractive indices to wavelengths beyond those covered in previous laboratory works, which will be useful for future studies

    Color and aerosol changes in Jupiter after a North Temperate Belt disturbance

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    International audienceThe banded appearance of Jupiter’s atmosphere shows significant changes over time, sometimes even transforming the reflectivity of a whole latitudinal band in a few weeks, and staying for years with an aspect different from the usual one. The origin of some of these disturbances may be associated with the creation and destruction of the chromophore species that provides Jovian clouds their reddish coloration. In this work, we have focused on the North Temperate Belt (NTB) disturbance detected during the second flyby of Juno mission (NASA) on October 2016, as a series of convective storms interacted with the fastest zonal jet on Jupiter at 24N over months and left a quiet belt characterized by an intense red coloration Sánchez-Lavega et al. (2017). In order to determine the corresponding changes in the upper clouds and hazes we have used images taken in 2016 and 2017 with the Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3. Such images were acquired before and after the outbreak, showing an intense color change in a narrow latitude band. The images cover the wavelength range from 250 nm up to the methane absorption band at 890 nm, thus sensitive to a number of atmospheric levels from the lower stratosphere to the upper troposphere where the ammonia condensation cloud is expected to be located. Here we use the radiative transfer suite NEMESIS Irwin et al. (2008) to determine the vertical distribution and properties of the upper hazes that best match the observed dependence of reflectivity with wavelength and geometry. We use two models for the Jovian chromophore: (A) an extended layer whose imaginary refractive index is left as a free parameter; and (B) a concentrated chromophore as in Sromovsky et al. (2017) using the optical properties by Carlson et al. (2016). Both scenarios show an increase in the number of particles responsible for the blue absorption approximately by a factor of 2, and require only small changes in the rest of the atmospheric parameters. We find that, even though results provided by scenario B are also compatible with observations, the limb-darkening is better described by scenario A, where there is also an increase of the particle absorption at the shortest wavelengths. In this work, we also provide an extension of the expected imaginary refractive indices to wavelengths beyond those covered in previous laboratory works, which will be useful for future studies

    Jupiter’s Great Red Spot: strong interactions with incoming anticyclones in 2019

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    Jupiter’s Great Red Spot (GRS), a giant anticyclone, is the largest and longest-lived of all the vortices observed in planetary atmospheres. During its history, the GRS has shrunk to half its size since 1879, and encountered many smaller anticyclones and other dynamical features that might tend to erode it. In 2018-2020, while having a historically small size, its structure and even its survival appeared to be threatened when a series of anticyclones moving in from the east tore off large fragments of the red area and distorted its shape. In this work we report observations of the dynamics of these interactions and show that as a result the GRS increased its internal rotation velocity, maintaining its vorticity but decreasing its visible area, and suffering a transient change in its otherwise steady 90-day oscillation in longitude. From a radiative transfer analysis and numerical simulations of the dynamics we show that the interactions affected the upper cloud tops of the GRS. We argue that the intense vorticity of the GRS, together with its larger size and depth compared to the interacting vortices, guarantees its long lifetime.This work has been supported by the Spanish project AYA2015-65041-P and PID2019-109467GB-I00 (MINECO/ FEDER, UE) and Grupos Gobierno Vasco IT1366-19. PI acknowledges a PhD scholarship from Gobierno Vasco. EGM is Serra Hunter Fellow at UPC. This work used data acquired from the NASA/ESA HST Space Telescope, asso- ciated with OPAL program (PI: Simon, GO13937), and archived by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universi- ties for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5–26,555. All maps are available at http://dx.doi. org/10.17909/T9G593. PlanetCam ob- servations were collected at the Centro Astronómico Hispánico en Andalucía (CAHA), operated jointly by the Insti- tuto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (CSIC) and the Andalusian Universities (Junta de Andalucía). EGM, MS, APG, MAC and ASL thankfully acknowledge the computer resources at Mare Nostrum and the technical support provided by Barcelona Supercomputing Center (AECT-2019-2-0006). This research has made use of the USGS Integrated Software for Imagers and Spectrometers (ISIS). We appreciate the contribution from all observers cited in TableS1 for his fundamental contribution to this study with Jupiter images obtained with high dedication and skill. GSO and TM were supported by NASA with funds distributed to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Properties and performance of the prototype instrument for the Pierre Auger Observatory

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    Copyright © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Construction of the first stage of the Pierre Auger Observatory has begun. The aim of the Observatory is to collect unprecedented information about cosmic rays above 1018 eV. The first phase of the project, the construction and operation of a prototype system, known as the engineering array, has now been completed. It has allowed all of the sub-systems that will be used in the full instrument to be tested under field conditions. In this paper, the properties and performance of these sub-systems are described and their success illustrated with descriptions of some of the events recorded thus far.Auger Collaboration, ..., J. A. Bellido, ..., R. W. Clay, ..., B. R. Dawson, ..., G. J. Thornton, ..., N. R. Wild, et al.http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/505701/description#descriptio

    Natural history notes

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    AUGER FD: Detector response to simulated showers and real event topologies

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    The performance of the Auger Fluorescence telescope is discussed on the basis of a mass production chain. In order to get a realistic estimate of the detector resolution, a large number of fully simulated CORSIKA showers have been used for this study. The propagation through the atmosphere and the detector response are taken into account and simulated in detail. Results for the the case of monocular reconstruction are presented here. No quality cuts for the event reconstruction have been applied so far. Finally, a schematic overview of the expected event topologies is given together with the display of a real event recently collected

    Search for heavy neutral leptons in final states with electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying tau leptons in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV

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    International audienceA search for heavy neutral leptons (HNLs) of Majorana or Dirac type using proton-proton collision data at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV is presented. The data were collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb1^{-1}. Events with three charged leptons (electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying tau leptons) are selected, corresponding to HNL production in association with a charged lepton and decay of the HNL to two charged leptons and a standard model (SM) neutrino. The search is performed for HNL masses between 10 GeV and 1.5 TeV. No evidence for an HNL signal is observed in data. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are found for the squared coupling strength of the HNL to SM neutrinos, considering exclusive coupling of the HNL to a single SM neutrino generation, for both Majorana and Dirac HNLs. The limits exceed previously achieved experimental constraints for a wide range of HNL masses, and the limits on tau neutrino coupling scenarios with HNL masses above the W boson mass are presented for the first time

    Search for heavy neutral leptons in final states with electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying tau leptons in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV

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    International audienceA search for heavy neutral leptons (HNLs) of Majorana or Dirac type using proton-proton collision data at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV is presented. The data were collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb1^{-1}. Events with three charged leptons (electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying tau leptons) are selected, corresponding to HNL production in association with a charged lepton and decay of the HNL to two charged leptons and a standard model (SM) neutrino. The search is performed for HNL masses between 10 GeV and 1.5 TeV. No evidence for an HNL signal is observed in data. Upper limits at 95% confidence level are found for the squared coupling strength of the HNL to SM neutrinos, considering exclusive coupling of the HNL to a single SM neutrino generation, for both Majorana and Dirac HNLs. The limits exceed previously achieved experimental constraints for a wide range of HNL masses, and the limits on tau neutrino coupling scenarios with HNL masses above the W boson mass are presented for the first time
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