# Jupiter's Ammonia Distribution Derived from VLA Maps at 3--37 GHz

**Authors:** I. de Pater, R.J. Sault, M.H. Wong, L.N. Fletcher, D. DeBoer, B.Butler

arXiv: 1902.07294 · 2019-02-21

## TL;DR

This study uses VLA radio observations across 3-37 GHz to map Jupiter's ammonia distribution, revealing belt structures, temperature variations, and ammonia depletion zones, enhancing understanding of its atmospheric dynamics and composition.

## Contribution

It provides the full frequency dataset at 3-37 GHz, detailed maps of ammonia and temperature distributions, and insights into Jupiter's atmospheric dynamics not previously available.

## Key findings

- Prominent radio-hot belt at 8.5-11°N latitude across all frequencies.
- Belt and zone structures observed at all frequencies, with latitudinal extent increasing at lower frequencies.
- Deep ammonia abundance is high (~4×10^{-4}), with depletion in the NEB down to 20 bar.

## Abstract

We observed Jupiter four times over a full rotation (10 hrs) with the upgraded Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) between December 2013 and December 2014. Preliminary results at 4-17 GHz were presented in de Pater et al. (2016); in the present paper we present the full data set at frequencies between 3 and 37 GHz. Major findings are: (i) the radio-hot belt at 8.5--11$^\circ$N latitude, near the interface between the North Equatorial Belt (NEB) and the Equatorial Zone (EZ) is prominent at all frequencies (3--37 GHz). Its location coincides with the southern latitudes of the NEB (7--17$^{\circ}$ N). (ii) Longitude-smeared maps reveal belts and zones at all frequencies at latitudes $\lesssim |20^\circ|$. The lowest brightness temperature is in the EZ near a latitude of 4$^\circ$N, and the NEB has the highest brightness temperature near 11$^\circ$N. The bright part of the NEB increases in latitudinal extent (spreads towards the north) with deceasing frequency, i.e., with depth into the atmosphere. In longitude-resolved maps, several belts, in particular in the southern hemisphere, are not continuous along the latitude line, but broken into small segments as if caused by an underlying wave. (iii) Model fits to longitude-smeared spectra are obtained at each latitude. These show a high NH$_3$ abundance (volume mixing ratio $\sim 4 \times 10^{-4}$) in the deep ($P>8-10$ bar) atmosphere, decreasing at higher altitudes due to cloud formation (e.g., in zones), or dynamics in combination with cloud condensation (belts). In the NEB ammonia gas is depleted down to at least the 20 bar level with an abundance of $1.75 \times 10^{-4}$. (iv) Using the entire VLA dataset, we confirm that the planet is extremely dynamic in the upper layers of the atmosphere, at $P<$2--3 bar, i.e., at the altitudes where clouds form. [Abridged]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.07294/full.md

## Figures

36 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.07294/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.07294