ALMA measurements of the HNC and HC$_3$N distributions in Titan's atmosphere
M. A. Cordiner, C. A. Nixon, N. A. Teanby, J. Serigano, S. B., Charnley, S. N. Milam, M. J. Mumma, P. G. J. Irwin, D. C. Lis, G. Villanueva,, L. Paganini, Y.-J. Kuan, A. J. Remijan

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA to map the spatial and spectral distributions of HNC and HC$_3$N$ in Titan's atmosphere, revealing their distinct, anisotropic, and altitude-dependent patterns, and providing new insights into Titan's atmospheric chemistry and circulation.
Contribution
First spatially and spectrally resolved maps of HNC and HC$_3$N$ in Titan's atmosphere, showing their distinct distributions and altitude-dependent variability.
Findings
HNC concentrated in the mesosphere and above at z > 400 km.
HC$_3$N abundant across 70-600 km altitude range.
Spatial asymmetry suggests longitudinal variability in Titan's mesosphere.
Abstract
We present spectrally and spatially-resolved maps of HNC and HCN emission from Titan's atmosphere, obtained using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) on 2013 November 17. These maps show anisotropic spatial distributions for both molecules, with resolved emission peaks in Titan's northern and southern hemispheres. The HCN maps indicate enhanced concentrations of this molecule over the poles, consistent with previous studies of Titan's photochemistry and atmospheric circulation. Differences between the spectrally-integrated flux distributions of HNC and HCN show that these species are not co-spatial. The observed spectral line shapes are consistent with HNC being concentrated predominantly in the mesosphere and above (at altitudes km), whereas HCN is abundant at a broader range of altitudes (-600 km). From spatial variations…
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