Detection and characterization of Io's atmosphere from high-resolution 4-{\mu}m spectroscopy
E. Lellouch, M. Ali-Dib, K.-L. Jessup, A. Smette, H.-U. K\"aufl, F., Marchis

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution 4-μm spectroscopy to detect and analyze Io's SO2 atmosphere, revealing its distribution, temperature, and diurnal variations, with no significant atmospheric change over two years.
Contribution
First detection of SO2 band in Io's atmosphere using high-res spectroscopy, providing detailed spatial and temporal atmospheric characterization.
Findings
Longitudinal asymmetry in SO2 column density
Latitudinal extent of about 40 degrees
Diurnal variation indicating sublimation support
Abstract
We report on high-resolution and spatially-resolved spectra of Io in the 4.0 {\mu}m region, recorded with the VLT/CRIRES instrument in 2008 and 2010, which provide the first detection of the {\nu}1 + {\nu}3 band of SO2 in Io's atmosphere. Data are analyzed to constrain the latitudinal, longitudinal, and diurnal distribution of Io's SO2 atmosphere as well as its characteristic temperature. equatorial SO2 column densities clearly show longitudinal asymmetry, but with a maximum of around 1.5e17 cm-2 at central meridian longitude L = 200-220 and a minimum of around 3e16 cm-2 at L = 285-300, the longitudinal pattern somewhat differs from earlier inferences from Ly {\alpha} and thermal IR measurements. Within the accuracy of the measurements, no evolution of the atmospheric density from mid-2008 to mid-2010 can be distinguished. The decrease of the SO2 column density towards high latitude is…
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