Titan's Prolific Propane: The Cassini CIRS Perspective
C. A. Nixon, D. E. Jennings, J.-M. Flaud, B. Bezard, N. A. Teanby, P., G. J. Irwin, T. M. Ansty, A. Coustenis, S. Vinatier, F. M. Flasar

TL;DR
This study utilizes Cassini CIRS data to detect and analyze propane's infrared emission bands on Titan, revealing new spectral features and emphasizing the need for improved laboratory spectroscopy for accurate atmospheric modeling.
Contribution
It identifies six propane infrared bands, including two new detections, and provides the first comprehensive analysis of propane's spectral presence across Titan's thermal infrared spectrum.
Findings
Detected at least six propane IR bands, including two new ones.
Retrieved propane abundances consistent with previous studies.
Highlighted the need for better laboratory spectral data.
Abstract
In this paper we select large spectral averages of data from the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) obtained in limb-viewing mode at low latitudes (30S--30N), greatly increasing the path length and hence signal-to-noise ratio for optically thin trace species such as propane. By modeling and subtracting the emissions of other gas species, we demonstrate that at least six infrared bands of propane are detected by CIRS, including two not previously identified in Titan spectra. Using a new line list for the range 1300-1400cm -1, along with an existing GEISA list, we retrieve propane abundances from two bands at 748 and 1376 cm-1. At 748 cm-1 we retrieve 4.2 +/- 0.5 x 10(-7) (1-sigma error) at 2 mbar, in good agreement with previous studies, although lack of hotbands in the present spectral atlas remains a problem. We also determine 5.7 +/- 0.8 x 10(-7) at 2 mbar from the 1376…
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