| Literature DB >> 32546873 |
Daniel Toledo1, Patrick G J Irwin1, Nicholas A Teanby2, Amy A Simon3, Michael H Wong4, Glenn S Orton5.
Abstract
In October and November 2014, spectra covering the 1.436 - 1.863-μm wavelength range from the SINFONI Integral Field Unit Spectrometer on the Very Large Telescope showed the presence of a vast bright North polar cap on Uranus, extending northward from about 40°N and at all longitudes observed. The feature, first detected in August 2014 from Keck telescope images, has a morphology very similar to the southern polar cap that was seen to fade before the 2007 equinox. At strong methane-absorbing wavelengths (for which only the high troposphere or stratosphere is sampled) the feature is not visible, indicating that it is not a stratospheric phenomenon. We show that the observed northern bright polar cap results mainly from a decrease in the tropospheric methane mixing ratio, rather than from a possible latitudinal variation of the optical properties or abundance of aerosol, implying an increase in polar downwelling near the tropopause level.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 32546873 PMCID: PMC7296616 DOI: 10.1029/2018gl077654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geophys Res Lett ISSN: 0094-8276 Impact factor: 4.720