The CH$_4$ abundance in Jupiter's upper atmosphere [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2203.10086


Hydrocarbon species, and in particular CH$_4$, play a key role in the stratosphere–thermosphere boundary of Jupiter, which occurs around the $\mu$-bar pressure level. Previous analyses of solar occultation, He and Ly-$\alpha$ airglow, and ISO/SWS measurements of the radiance around 3.3 $\mu$m have inferred significantly different methane concentrations. Here we aim to accurately model the CH$_4$ radiance at 3.3 $\mu$m measured by ISO/SWS by using a comprehensive non-local thermodynamic equilibrium model and the most recent collisional rates measured in the laboratory for CH$_4$ to shed new light onto the methane concentration in the upper atmosphere of Jupiter. These emission bands have been shown to present a peak contribution precisely at the $\mu$-bar level, hence directly probing the region of interest. We find that a high CH$_4$ concentration is necessary to explain the data, in contrast with the most recent analyses, and that the observations favour the lower limit of the latest laboratory measurements of the CH$_4$ collisional relaxation rates. Our results provide precise constraints on the composition and dynamics of the lower atmosphere of Jupiter.

Read this paper on arXiv…

A. Sánchez-López, M. López-Puertas, M. García-Comas, et. al.
Mon, 21 Mar 22
11/60

Comments: 15 pages; accepted for publication in A&A