The Gas Composition and Deep Cloud Structure of Jupiter's Great Red Spot
Gordon L. Bjoraker, Michael H. Wong, Imke de Pater, Tilak Hewagama,, Mate Adamkovics, and Glenn S. Orton

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectra to analyze Jupiter's Great Red Spot, revealing detailed gas compositions and cloud structures, including water and ammonia clouds, and constraining planetary elemental ratios.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the cloud layers and gas abundances in the GRS, including the first detection of germanium isotopes and refined measurements of key atmospheric constituents.
Findings
Identified an opaque water cloud at 5 bars.
Constrained ammonia cloud at ~570 mbar.
Detected germanium isotopes and measured deep atmospheric CO.
Abstract
We have obtained high-resolution spectra of Jupiter's Great Red Spot (GRS) between 4.6 and 5.4 microns using telescopes on Mauna Kea in order to derive gas abundances and to constrain its cloud structure between 0.5 and 5~bars. We used line profiles of deuterated methane CH3D at 4.66 microns to infer the presence of an opaque cloud at 5+/-1 bar. From thermochemical models this is almost certainly a water cloud. We also used the strength of Fraunhofer lines in the GRS to obtain the ratio of reflected sunlight to thermal emission. The level of the reflecting layer was constrained to be at 570+/-30 mbar based on fitting strong ammonia lines at 5.32 microns. We identify this layer as an ammonia cloud based on the temperature where gaseous ammonia condenses. We found evidence for a strongly absorbing, but not totally opaque, cloud layer at pressures deeper than 1.3 bar by combining…
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