Refining Saturn's deuterium-hydrogen ratio via IRTF/TEXES spectroscopy
James S.D. Blake, Leigh N. Fletcher, Thomas K. Greathouse, Glenn S., Orton, Henrik Melin, Mike T. Roman, Arrate Antu\~nano, Padraig T. Donnelly,, Naomi Rowe-Gurney, Oliver King

TL;DR
This study measures Saturn's deuterium-hydrogen ratio in stratospheric methane using ground-based spectroscopy, confirming low D/H values and highlighting discrepancies with previous measurements and models.
Contribution
It provides a new ground-based spectroscopic measurement of Saturn's D/H ratio in methane, supporting previous findings and raising questions about fractionation factors and atmospheric representativeness.
Findings
D/H ratio in Saturn's stratospheric methane is approximately 1.65 x 10^-5.
The measured D/H ratio aligns with Cassini and ISO observations.
The D/H ratio is lower than previous tropospheric measurements and proto-solar values.
Abstract
The abundance of deuterium in giant planet atmospheres provides constraints on the reservoirs of ices incorporated into these worlds during their formation and evolution. Motivated by discrepancies in the measured deuterium-hydrogen ratio (D/H) on Jupiter and Saturn, we present a new measurement of the D/H ratio in methane for Saturn from ground-based measurements. We analysed a spectral cube (covering 1151-1160 cm from 6 February 2013) from the Texas Echelon Cross Echelle Spectrograph (TEXES) on NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) where emission lines from both methane and deuterated methane are well resolved. Our estimate of the D/H ratio in stratospheric methane, is in agreement with results derived from Cassini CIRS and ISO/SWS observations, confirming the unexpectedly low CHD abundance. Assuming a fractionation factor of…
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