Tropospheric composition and circulation of Uranus with ALMA and the VLA

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Edward M. Molter (University of California)

Imke De Pater (University of California, TU Delft - Aerospace Engineering)

Statia Luszcz-Cook (American Museum of Natural History, Columbia University)

Joshua Tollefson (University of California)

Robert J. Sault

Bryan Butler (National Radio Astronomy Observatory)

David De Boer (University of California)

Research Group
Astrodynamics & Space Missions
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/abc48a Final published version
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Research Group
Astrodynamics & Space Missions
Issue number
1
Volume number
2
Article number
3
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338
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Abstract

We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and Very Large Array (VLA) spatial maps of the Uranian atmosphere taken between 2015 and 2018 at wavelengths from 1.3 mm to 10 cm, probing pressures from ~1 to ~50 bar at spatial resolutions from 0 1 to 0 8. Radiative transfer modeling was performed to determine the physical origin of the brightness variations across Uranus's disk. The radio-dark equator and midlatitudes of the planet (south of ~50°N) are well fit by a deep H2S mixing ratio of 8.7+3.1- 1.5 ×10- 4 ( 37+13-6 × solar) and a deep NH3 mixing ratio of 1.7+0.7-0.4 ×10-4 ( 1.4+0.50.3× solar), in good agreement with models of Uranus's disk-averaged spectrum from the literature. The north polar region is very bright at all frequencies northward of ~50°N, which we attribute to strong depletions extending down to the NH4SH layer in both NH3 and H2S relative to the equatorial region; the model is consistent with an NH3 abundance of 4.7+2.1- 1.8 ×10-7 and an H2S abundance of <1.9×10-7 between ~20 and ~50 bar. Combining this observed depletion in condensible molecules with methane-sensitive near-infrared observations from the literature suggests large-scale downwelling in the north polar vortex region from ~0.1 to ~50 bar. The highest-resolution maps reveal zonal radio-dark and radio-bright bands at 20°S, 0°, and 20°N, as well as zonal banding within the north polar region. The difference in brightness is a factor of ~10 less pronounced in these bands than the difference between the north pole and equator, and additional observations are required to determine the temperature, composition, and vertical extent of these features.