Seasonal changes in the middle atmosphere of Titan from Cassini/CIRS observations: temperature and trace species abundance profiles from 2004 to 2017
Christophe Math\'e, Sandrine Vinatier, Bruno B\'ezard, S\'ebastien, Lebonnois, Nicolas Gorius, Donald E. Jennings, Andrei Mamoutkine, Ever, Guandique, Jan Vatant d'Ollone

TL;DR
This study analyzes nearly a decade of Cassini/CIRS infrared data to reveal seasonal variations in Titan's middle atmosphere, including temperature and trace gases, highlighting polar vortex effects and dynamic processes.
Contribution
It provides detailed vertical profiles of temperature and trace species over multiple seasons, utilizing updated calibration and advanced inversion techniques for the first time.
Findings
Polar regions show strong seasonal temperature and composition changes.
Enrichment of photochemical compounds correlates with polar vortex activity.
Detection of an inertia-gravity wave oscillation near the northern spring equinox.
Abstract
The Cassini/Composite InfraRed Spectrometer (CIRS) instrument has been observing the middle atmosphere of Titan over almost half a Saturnian year. We used the CIRS dataset processed through the up-to-date calibration pipeline to characterize seasonal changes of temperature and abundance profiles in the middle atmosphere of Titan, from mid-northern winter to early northern summer all around the satellite. We used limb spectra from 590 to 1500 cm at 0.5-cm spectral resolution, which allows us to probe different altitudes. We averaged the limb spectra recorded during each flyby on a fixed altitude grid to increase the signal-to-noise ratio. These thermal infrared data were analyzed by means of a radiative transfer code coupled with an inversion algorithm, in order to retrieve vertical temperature and abundance profiles. These profiles cover an altitude range of approximately…
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