Evolution of Saturn's north polar color and cloud structure between 2012 and 2017 inferred from Cassini VIMS and ISS observations
L.A. Sromovsky, K. H. Baines, P.M. Fry

TL;DR
Between 2012 and 2017, Saturn's north pole region experienced significant color and cloud structure changes, driven mainly by variations in stratospheric haze and cloud layer properties, as revealed by Cassini observations.
Contribution
This study provides a detailed aerosol model explaining the observed color and cloud structure evolution of Saturn's north pole using Cassini spectral data.
Findings
The pole's color shifted from dark blue/green to gold between 2012 and 2017.
Optical depths of certain cloud layers increased significantly, especially outside the eye.
Changes in stratospheric haze primarily caused the observed color transformation.
Abstract
Cassini/ISS imagery and Cassini/VIMS spectral imaging observations from 0.35 to 5.12 microns show that between 2012 and 2017 the region poleward of the Saturn's northern hexagon changed from dark blue/green to a moderately brighter gold color, except for the inner eye region (88.2 deg - 90 deg N), which remained relatively unchanged. These and even more dramatic near-IR changes can be reproduced by an aerosol model of four compact layers consisting of a stratospheric haze at an effective pressure near 50 mbar, a deeper haze of putative diphosphine particles typically near 300 mbar, an ammonia cloud layer with a base pressure between 0.4 bar and 1.3 bar, and a deeper cloud of a possible mix of NH4SH and water ice particles within the 2.7 to 4.5 bar region. Our analysis of the background clouds between the discrete features shows that between 2013 and 2016 the effective pressures of most…
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