Saturn In Perspective I. Ten years of Hubble Space Telescope Observations (1994-2004): Atmospheric Features and Zonal Winds A. Sánchez-Lavega (1), R. Hueso(1), S. Pérez-Hoyos (1), J. F. Rojas (1), R. G. French (2) (1) Grupo Ciencias Planetarias, Dpto. Física Aplicada I Universidad del País Vasco, Bilbao (Spain) (2) Wellesley College, Dept. of Astronomy, Wellesley, MA (USA). GIANT PLANETS WINDS Saturn: • Hazes & Upper Clouds (NH3, NH4SH, H2O) (P~ 0.5-12 bar) • Deep H2 atmosphere (~ 0.5 RS) •Rapid rotation: Period: 10 hr 39 min 24 s (S-III) Æ but PROBLEM ! ~ + 6 min (?) •Internal Energy source (~ 2x Insolation) Insolation Variability in Saturn’s Equator (1) Orbital tilt ~ 27° (2) Orbital eccentricity = 0.052 (3) Period (Saturn’s year) ~ 29.5 years (4) Rings effects: insolation shadowing, reflection of incident sunlight, thermal radiation GWS 1994 GWS 1990 δFo/<FEQ> ~ ± 10 - 30 % Equator δFo/<FEQ> ~ ± 90 % Large Equatorial Storms (Great White Spots) Events in 1876, 1933, 1990, 1994 (secondary) 1994 event GWS 1990: Onset & 1 month later 1994-95 SATURN’S FEATURES: HST 1994-2004 Polar Spots (CH4- 890 nm) Temperate Storms (814 nm, 42°S) Equatorial features (890 nm, 10°N – 20°S) Bright Spots (439 nm, 29°S) Mean Zonal Winds: 1980-81 versus 1994-2004 450 * Large Equatorial Wind “Drop”: ∆u ~ 200 ms-1 (Lat: 20°N to 20°S) * Persistence of the jets outside the equator * New polar southern jet Æ Saturn’s highly symmetryic wind profile. 1994-2002 HST (points) GB (circles) Voyager 1 & 2 1980-81 Zonal Wind Velocity (m/s) Mean Zonal Winds: 1980-81 versus 1994-2004 450 Equatorial Jet 1994-2002 HST (points) GB (circles) * Large Equatorial Wind “Drop”: ∆u ~ 200 ms-1 (Lat: 20°N to 20°S) * Persistence of the jets outside the equator * New polar southern jet Æ Saturn’s highly symmetryic wind profile. Voyager 1 & 2 1980-81 Zonal Wind Velocity (m/s) 1- A. Sánchez-Lavega, J. F. Rojas and P. V. Sada, Saturn's Zonal Winds at Cloud Level. Icarus, 147, 405-420 (2000). 2- A. Sánchez-Lavega, S. Pérez-Hoyos, J. F. Rojas, R. Hueso and R. G. French. A strong decrease in Saturn's equatorial jet at cloud level. Nature, 423, 623625 (2003). 3- A. Sánchez-Lavega, R. Hueso, S. Pérez-Hoyos, J.F. Rojas and R. G. French. Saturn's cloud morphology and zonal winds before the Cassini encounter. Icarus, 170, 519-523 (2004). Reprints can be downloaded from http://www.ajax.ehu.es/grupo/ Storm - Zonal Flow Interaction Wind changes by large convective events Motions around storms GWS 1990 N TOTAL CHANGE IN THE EQUATORIAL JET 390 km ∆U = 15-30 m/s Global instability at the equator S W 510 km E Water ~ 4 solar ∆U = 200 m/s Highly unlikely Wave Motions Equatorial Rossby, no wind shear (Allison, 1990): − βa 2 /n2 , ( gravest; j = 1) c − u= βa 2 1+ ( 2 j +1) 2 n gh(z) For c - u = −200 ms −1; n = 2-4 ⇒ Equivalent thickness: h ~ 44 - 58 km Height Longitude c c Latitude gh of This is nottrapping a likely scenario +1) Meridional distance (±20o );since y2 = (2 jfeatures very different sizes move at the same βwind speed. ⇒ h = 64 km Vertical Wind Shear Height u = 275 m/s u = 475 m/s T1 T2 ∆T Ædu/dz Latitude Wind shear may be contributing to the “change”. However, the whole 200 m/s wind speed difference cannot be entirely due to a strong vertical shear. Summary 1. SATURN’S EQUATORIAL REGION (~ ± 20°): suffers intense dynamical changes Prefered region for the Great White Spots (GWS): Large-scale (20000 km) are rare events (1876, 1933, 1990), periodic (?), evolve to planetary-scale disturbance. (water moist convective storms). The strongest eastward jet (500 ms-1) in planetary atmospheres AND Wind velocity variations (Æ ∆u ~ 200 m/s): (1) Vertical (thermal wind) shear effects (partially likely). (2) Wave motions (not true flow) (?) (3) A true change in the mean zonal flow (?) (a) Produced by the GWS & their large-scale dynamical activity (b) Seasonal insolation changes. 2. SATURN’S NON EQUATORIAL REGION: The zonal jet system highly symmetric and long-term Stable Æ Suggest deep rooted motions
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