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Temporal Behavior of Stratospheric Ammonia Abundance and Temperature Following the SL9 Impacts
Authors:Kelly Fast  Theodor KostiukPaul Romani  Fred EspenakTilak Hewagama  Albert BetzRita Boreiko  Timothy Livengood
Institution:
  • a Planetary Systems Branch, Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, 20771, f1Kelly.Fast@gsfc.nasa.govf1
  • b Planetary Systems Branch, Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, 20771
  • c Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, 20742-2421
  • d CASA, University of Colorado, 593 UCB, Boulder, Colorado, 80303
  • e Challenger Center for Space Science Education, 1029 North Royal Street, Suite 300, Alexandria, Virginia, 22314
  • Abstract:Infrared emission lines of stratospheric ammonia (NH3) were observed following the collisions of the fragments of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter in July of 1994 at the impact sites of fragments G and K. Infrared heterodyne spectra near 10.7 μm were obtained by A. Betz et al. (in Abstracts for Special Sessions on Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, The 26th Meeting of the Division for Planetary Sciences, Washington DC, 31 Oct.-4 Nov. 1994, p. 25) using one of the Infrared Spatial Interferometer telescope systems on Mount Wilson. Lineshapes of up to three different NH3 emission lines were measured at a resolving power of ∼107 at multiple times following the impacts. We present here our radiative transfer analysis of the fully resolved spectral lineshapes of the multiple rovibrational lines. This analysis provides information on temperature structure and NH3 abundance distributions and their temporal changes up to 18 days after impact. These results are compared to photochemical models to determine the role of photochemistry and other mechanisms in the destruction and dilution of NH3 in the jovian stratosphere after the SL9 impacts.One day following the G impact, the inferred temperature above 0.001 mbar altitude is 283±13 K, consistent with a recent plume splashback model. Cooling of the upper stratosphere to 204 K by the fourth day and to quiescence after a week is consistent with a simple gray atmosphere radiative flux calculation and mixing with cold jovian air. During the first 4 days after impact, NH3 was present primarily at altitudes above 1 mbar with a column density of (7.7±1.6)×1017 cm−2 after 1 day and (3.7±0.8)×1017 cm−2 after 4 days. (Errors represent precision.) We obtained >2.5 times more NH3 than can be supplied by nitrogen from a large cometary fragment, suggesting a primarily jovian source for the NH3. By 18 days postimpact, a return to quiescent upper stratospheric temperature is retrieved for the G region, with an NH3 column density of 7.3×1017 cm−2 or more in the lower stratosphere, possibly supplied by NH3 upwelling across an impact-heated and turbulent tropopause, which may have been masked by initial dust and haze. Above the 1-mbar level, the maximum retrieved column density decreased to 6.5×1016 cm−2. Comparison to photochemical models indicates that photolysis alone is not sufficient to account for the loss of NH3 above 1 mbar by that time, even when chemical reformation of NH3 is ignored. We speculate that the dispersion of plume material at high altitudes (above 1 mbar) is responsible for the change in the spectra observed a few days postimpact. Data on the K impact region provide qualitatively consistent results.
    Keywords:Comets S-L9
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