Assessing the long-term variability of acetylene and ethane in the stratosphere of Jupiter
Henrik Melin, L.N. Fletcher, P.T. Donnelly, T. Greathouse, J. Lacy,, G.S. Orton, R. Giles, J. Sinclair, P.G.J. Irwin

TL;DR
This study analyzes six years of NASA IRTF TEXES data to examine the persistent, contrasting latitudinal distributions of acetylene and ethane in Jupiter's stratosphere, revealing insights into their production, distribution, and atmospheric dynamics.
Contribution
It provides the first long-term observational evidence of the decoupled and evolving latitudinal distributions of acetylene and ethane on Jupiter, linking these patterns to atmospheric mixing and wave phenomena.
Findings
Acetylene decreases towards the poles, peaking at ~30°N with 0.8 ppm at 1 mbar.
Ethane increases towards the poles, peaking at ~50° latitude with 18 ppm.
Distribution asymmetry in acetylene diminishes over years, indicating changing vertical mixing.
Abstract
Acetylene (CH) and ethane (CH) are both produced in the stratosphere of Jupiter via photolysis of methane (CH). Despite this common source, the latitudinal distribution of the two species is radically different, with acetylene decreasing in abundance towards the pole, and ethane increasing towards the pole. We present six years of NASA IRTF TEXES mid-infrared observations of the zonally-averaged emission of methane, acetylene and ethane. We confirm that the latitudinal distributions of ethane and acetylene are decoupled, and that this is a persistent feature over multiple years. The acetylene distribution falls off towards the pole, peaking at 30N with a volume mixing ratio (VMR) of 0.8 parts per million (ppm) at 1 mbar and still falling off at with a VMR of 0.3 ppm. The acetylene distributions are asymmetric on average, but…
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