Detection of CO and HCN in Pluto's atmosphere with ALMA
E. Lellouch, M. Gurwell, B. Butler, T. Fouchet, P. Lavvas, D.F., Strobel, B. Sicardy, A. Moullet, R. Moreno, D. Bockel\'ee-Morvan, N. Biver,, L. Young, D. Lis, J. Stansberry, A. Stern, H. Weaver, E. Young, X. Zhu, J., Boissier

TL;DR
This study used ALMA observations to detect CO and HCN in Pluto's atmosphere, revealing detailed composition, temperature structure, and supersaturation phenomena, advancing understanding of Pluto's atmospheric chemistry and dynamics.
Contribution
First detection of HCN in Pluto's atmosphere with detailed analysis of its abundance, temperature profile, and supersaturation, providing new insights into Pluto's atmospheric composition and processes.
Findings
Detected CO and HCN rotational lines in Pluto's atmosphere.
Determined CO mole fraction as 515±40 ppm at 12 μbar surface pressure.
Found HCN supersaturation by 7-8 orders of magnitude in the upper atmosphere.
Abstract
Observations of the Pluto-Charon system, acquired with the ALMA interferometer on June 12-13, 2015, have yielded a detection of the CO(3-2) and HCN(4-3) rotational transitions from Pluto, providing a strong confirmation of the presence of CO, and the first observation of HCN, in Pluto's atmosphere. The CO and HCN lines probe Pluto's atmosphere up to ~450 km and ~900 km altitude, respectively. The CO detection yields (i) a much improved determination of the CO mole fraction, as 515+/-40 ppm for a 12 ubar surface pressure (ii) clear evidence for a well-marked temperature decrease (i.e., mesosphere) above the 30-50 km stratopause and a best-determined temperature of 70+/-2 K at 300 km, in agreement with recent inferences from New Horizons / Alice solar occultation data. The HCN line shape implies a high abundance of this species in the upper atmosphere, with a mole fraction >1.5x10-5 above…
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