Titan's atmosphere as observed by Cassini/VIMS solar occultations: CH$_4$, CO and evidence for C$_2$H$_6$ absorption
L. Maltagliati, B. B\'ezard, S. Vinatier, M. M. Hedman, E. Lellouch,, P. D. Nicholson, C. Sotin, R. J. de Kok, B. Sicardy

TL;DR
This study analyzes Cassini/VIMS solar occultation data to characterize Titan's atmosphere, revealing methane, carbon monoxide, and ethane absorption features, and suggesting the presence of complex hydrocarbons like PAHs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed vertical distribution of CH$_4$, CO, and ethane in Titan's atmosphere from VIMS data, highlighting additional unidentified absorption bands.
Findings
Methane abundance is 1.28%, lower than Huygens measurements.
Detected ethane absorption affecting multiple spectral regions.
Estimated CO mixing ratio is 46 ppm between 70-170 km.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the VIMS solar occultations dataset, which allows us to extract vertically resolved information on the characteristics of Titan's atmosphere between 100-700 km with a characteristic vertical resolution of 10 km. After a series of data treatment procedures, 4 occultations out of 10 are retained. This sample covers different seasons and latitudes of Titan. The transmittances show clearly the evolution of the haze and detect the detached layer at 310 km in Sept. 2011 at mid-northern latitudes. Through the inversion of the transmission spectra with a line-by-line radiative transfer code we retrieve the vertical distribution of CH and CO mixing ratio. The two methane bands at 1.4 and 1.7 {\mu}m are always in good agreement and yield an average stratospheric abundance of %. This is significantly less than the value of 1.48% obtained by the…
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