Meridional variation in tropospheric methane on Titan observed with AO spectroscopy at Keck and VLT
M\'at\'e \'Ad\'amkovics, Jonathan L. Mitchell, Alexander G. Hayes,, Patricio M. Rojo, Paul Corlies, Jason W. Barnes, Valentin D. Ivanov, Robert, H. Brown, Kevin H. Baines, Bonnie J. Buratti, Roger N. Clark, Philip D., Nicholson, Christophe Sotin

TL;DR
This study used ground-based AO spectroscopy at Keck and VLT to map the distribution of tropospheric methane on Titan, revealing significant meridional variations and suggesting polar-sourced methane influences lower latitudes.
Contribution
First detailed spatial mapping of Titan's tropospheric methane using combined high- and moderate-resolution ground-based spectroscopy.
Findings
Southern mid-latitudes have 10-40% more methane than nominal levels.
Northern hemisphere methane is about 90% of the nominal profile.
Methane distribution indicates polar air sources influence lower latitudes.
Abstract
The spatial distribution of the tropospheric methane on Titan was measured using near-infrared spectroscopy. Ground-based observations at 1.5 (H-band) were performed during the same night using instruments with adaptive optics at both the W. M. Keck Observatory and at the Paranal Observatory on 17 July 2014 UT. The integral field observations with SINFONI on the VLT covered the entire H-band at moderate resolving power, , while the Keck observations were performed with NIRSPAO near 1.55254 at higher resolution, . The moderate resolution observations are used for flux calibration and for the determination of model parameters that can be degenerate in the interpretation of high resolution spectra. Line-by-line calculations of CH and CHD correlated distributions from the HITRAN 2012 database were used,…
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