The 2003 Nov 14 occultation by Titan of TYC 1343-1865-1. II. Analysis of light curves
A. Zalucha, A. Fitzsimmons, J. L. Elliot, J. Thomas-Osip, H. B., Hammel, V. S. Dhillon, T. R. Marsh, F. W. Taylor, P. G. J. Irwin

TL;DR
This study analyzed Titan's atmosphere during a 2003 occultation using multi-wavelength light curves, revealing wavelength-dependent extinction, temperature profiles consistent with Huygens data, and introducing a new temperature determination method from scintillation spikes.
Contribution
It presents a novel analysis of Titan's atmospheric extinction and temperature profiles using multi-filter light curves and introduces a new scintillation-based temperature measurement technique.
Findings
Wavelength-dependent atmospheric extinction observed.
Temperature profiles agree with Huygens measurements above 415 km.
New scintillation spike method yields temperatures comparable or warmer than previous data.
Abstract
We observed a stellar occultation by Titan on 2003 November 14 from La Palma Observatory using ULTRACAM with three Sloan filters: u', g', and i' (358, 487, and 758 nm, respectively). The occultation probed latitudes 2 degrees S and 1 degrees N during immersion and emersion, respectively. A prominent central flash was present in only the i' filter, indicating wavelength-dependent atmospheric extinction. We inverted the light curves to obtain six lower-limit temperature profiles between 335 and 485 km (0.04 and 0.003 mb) altitude. The i' profiles agreed with the temperature measured by the Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument [Fulchignoni, M. et al., 2005. Nature 438, 785-791] above 415 km (0.01 mb). The profiles obtained from different wavelength filters systematically diverge as altitude decreases, which implies significant extinction in the light curves. Applying an extinction…
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