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Saturn meteorology: A diagnostic assessment of thin-layer configurations for the zonal flow
Authors:Michael Allison  Peter H. Stone
Affiliation:1. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Institute for Space Studies, 2880 Broadway, New York, New York, 10025, USA;2. Department of Meteorology and Physical Oceanography, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
Abstract:Voyager imaging, infrared, and radio observations for Saturn have been recently interpreted by Smith et al. (1982) as an indication that the jet streams observed at the cloud tops extend to depths greater than the 104-bar level. This analysis assumes a maximum latitudinal temperature contrast of a few percent, a mean atmospheric rotation rate at depth given by Saturn's ratio period, and no variation with latitude of the bottom pressure level for the zonal flow system. These assumptions are not, however, firmly constrained by observation. The diagnostic analysis of plausible alternative configurations for Saturn's atmospheric structure demonstrates that a thin weather layer system (confined at mid to high latitudes to levels above 200 bar) cannot be excluded by any of the available observations. A quantitative estimate of the effects of moisture condensation (including the differentiation of mean molecular weight) suggests that these might provide the buoyancy contrasts necessary to support a thin-layer flow provided that Saturn's outer envelope is enriched approximately 10 times in water abundance relative to a solar composition atmosphere and strongly differentiated with latitude at the condensation level.
Keywords:To whom correspondence should be addressed.
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