Reanalysis of Uranus' cloud scattering properties from IRTF/SpeX observations using a self-consistent scattering cloud retrieval scheme
P.G.J. Irwin, D.S. Tice, L.N. Fletcher, J.K. Barstow, N.A. Teanby,, G.S. Orton, and G.R. Davis

TL;DR
This study introduces a new self-consistent cloud retrieval method for Uranus's near-infrared spectra, improving understanding of cloud properties and composition by analyzing IRTF/SpeX observations from 2009.
Contribution
A novel retrieval approach that models Uranus's cloud scattering properties self-consistently using spectral data and Kramers-Kronig analysis, advancing planetary atmosphere characterization.
Findings
Both cloud models fit the observed spectrum well.
Main cloud resides at approximately 2 bars with more absorbing particles at >1 micron.
Revised cloud properties better match the expected methane cloud position.
Abstract
We have developed a new retrieval approach to modelling near-infrared spectra of Uranus that represents a significant improvement over previous modelling methods. We reanalysed IRTF/SpeX observations of Uranus observed in 2009 covering the wavelength range 0.8 to 1.8 microns and reported by Tice et al. (2013). By retrieving the imaginary refractive index spectra of cloud particles we are able to consistently define the real part of the refractive index spectra, through a Kramers-Kronig analysis, and thus determine self-consistent extinction cross-section, single-scattering and phase-function spectra for the clouds and hazes in Uranus' atmosphere. We tested two different cloud-modelling schemes used in conjunction with the temperature/methane profile of Baines et al. (1995), a reanalysis of the Voyager-2 radio-occultation observations performed by Sromovsky, Fry and Tomasko (2011), and a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
