The Origin of Nitrogen on Jupiter and Saturn from the $^{15}$N/$^{14}$N Ratio
Leigh N. Fletcher, Thomas K. Greathouse, Glenn S. Orton, Patrick G.J., Irwin, Olivier Mousis, James A. Sinclair, Rohini S. Giles

TL;DR
This study measures the nitrogen isotope ratios on Jupiter and Saturn using ground-based spectroscopy to understand their nitrogen sources and formation history, finding ratios consistent with primordial nebula values and ruling out significant nitrogen enrichment.
Contribution
First ground-based determination of Jupiter's $^{15}$N/$^{14}$N ratio and the first upper limit for Saturn, providing new constraints on planetary nitrogen origins.
Findings
Jupiter's $^{15}$N/$^{14}$N ratio is consistent with primordial values.
Saturn's $^{15}$N/$^{14}$N ratio is not significantly enriched, ruling out strong $^{15}$N-enrichment.
Results suggest nitrogen was primarily accreted as N$_2$ from the gas phase or low-temperature ices.
Abstract
The Texas Echelon cross Echelle Spectrograph (TEXES), mounted on NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF), was used to map mid-infrared ammonia absorption features on both Jupiter and Saturn in February 2013. Ammonia is the principle reservoir of nitrogen on the giant planets, and the ratio of isotopologues (N/N) can reveal insights into the molecular carrier (e.g., as N or NH) of nitrogen to the forming protoplanets, and hence the source reservoirs from which these worlds accreted. We targeted two spectral intervals (900 and 960 cm) that were relatively clear of terrestrial atmospheric contamination and contained close features of NH and NH, allowing us to derive the ratio from a single spectrum without ambiguity due to radiometric calibration (the primary source of uncertainty in this study). We present the first ground-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
