Title of article
The structure of Titan’s atmosphere from Cassini radio occultations
Author/Authors
Alejandro F. Schinder، نويسنده , , Paul J. and Flasar، نويسنده , , F. Michael and Marouf، نويسنده , , Essam A. and French، نويسنده , , Richard G. and McGhee، نويسنده , , Colleen A. and Kliore، نويسنده , , Arvydas J. and Rappaport، نويسنده , , Nicole J. and Barbinis، نويسنده , , Elias and Fleischman، نويسنده , , Don and Anabtawi، نويسنده , , Aseel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
15
From page
460
To page
474
Abstract
We present results from the two radio occultations of the Cassini spacecraft by Titan in 2006, which probed mid-southern latitudes. Three of the ingress and egress soundings occurred within a narrow latitude range, 31–34°S near the surface, and the fourth at 52.8°S. Temperature–altitude profiles for all four occultation soundings are presented, and compared with the results of the Voyager 1 radio occultation (Lindal, G.F., Wood, G.E., Hotz, H.B., Sweetnam, D.N., Eshleman, V.R., Tyler, G.L. [1983]. Icarus 53, 348–363), the HASI instrument on the Huygens descent probe (Fulchignoni, M. et al. [2005]. Nature 438, 785–791), and Cassini CIRS results (Flasar, F.M. et al. [2005]. Science 308, 975–978; Achterberg, R.K., Conrath, B.J., Gierasch, P.J., Flasar, F.M., Nixon, C.A. [2008b]. Icarus 194, 263–277). Sources of error in the retrieved temperature–altitude profiles are also discussed, and a major contribution is from spacecraft velocity errors in the reconstructed ephemeris. These can be reduced by using CIRS data at 300 km to make along-track adjustments of the spacecraft timing. The occultation soundings indicate that the temperatures just above the surface at 31–34°S are about 93 K, while that at 53°S is about 1 K colder. At the tropopause, the temperatures at the lower latitudes are all about 70 K, while the 53°S profile is again 1 K colder. The temperature lapse rate in the lowest 2 km for the two ingress (dawn) profiles at 31 and 33°S lie along a dry adiabat except within ∼200 m of the surface, where a small stable inversion occurs. This could be explained by turbulent mixing with low viscosity near the surface. The egress profile near 34°S shows a more complex structure in the lowest 2 km, while the egress profile at 53°S is more stable.
Keywords
Titan , Structure , Atmospheres
Journal title
Icarus
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Icarus
Record number
2378441
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