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Active upper-atmosphere chemistry and dynamics from polar circulation reversal on Titan
Author(s) -
N. A. Teanby,
P. G. J. Irwin,
C. A. Nixon,
Remco de Kok,
Sandrine Vinatier,
A. Coustenis,
E. SeftonNash,
S. B. Calcutt,
F. M. Flasar
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature11611
Subject(s) - titan (rocket family) , atmosphere (unit) , atmosphere of titan , atmospheric sciences , polar vortex , troposphere , stratosphere , altitude (triangle) , astrobiology , geology , environmental science , meteorology , physics , geometry , mathematics
Saturn's moon Titan has a nitrogen atmosphere comparable to Earth's, with a surface pressure of 1.4 bar. Numerical models reproduce the tropospheric conditions very well but have trouble explaining the observed middle-atmosphere temperatures, composition and winds. The top of the middle-atmosphere circulation has been thought to lie at an altitude of 450 to 500 kilometres, where there is a layer of haze that appears to be separated from the main haze deck. This 'detached' haze was previously explained as being due to the co-location of peak haze production and the limit of dynamical transport by the circulation's upper branch. Here we report a build-up of trace gases over the south pole approximately two years after observing the 2009 post-equinox circulation reversal, from which we conclude that middle-atmosphere circulation must extend to an altitude of at least 600 kilometres. The primary drivers of this circulation are summer-hemisphere heating of haze by absorption of solar radiation and winter-hemisphere cooling due to infrared emission by haze and trace gases; our results therefore imply that these effects are important well into the thermosphere (altitudes higher than 500 kilometres). This requires both active upper-atmosphere chemistry, consistent with the detection of high-complexity molecules and ions at altitudes greater than 950 kilometres, and an alternative explanation for the detached haze, such as a transition in haze particle growth from monomers to fractal structures.

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