Seasonal variations of chemical species and haze in Titan's upper atmosphere
Siteng Fan, Daniel Zhao, Cheng Li, Donald E. Shemansky, Mao-Chang, Liang, Yuk L. Yung

TL;DR
This study analyzes seasonal changes in Titan's upper atmosphere, revealing temperature decreases, upwelling, and haze layer variations over multiple Titan years using Cassini/UVIS data and advanced retrieval methods.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observational constraints on seasonal variations of chemical species and haze in Titan's upper atmosphere over an extended period.
Findings
No significant change in species profiles before equinox
Temperature decreases and upwelling observed in summer hemisphere
Detached haze layer disappears near vernal equinox
Abstract
Seasonal variation is significant in Titan's atmosphere due to the large change of solar insolation resulting from Titan's 26.7{\deg} axial tilt relative to the plane of Saturn's orbit. Here we present an investigation of hydrocarbon and nitrile species in Titan's upper atmosphere at 400-1200 km, which includes the mesosphere and the lower thermosphere, over more than one fourth of Titan's year (2006-2014, LS=318{\deg}-60{\deg}), using eighteen stellar occultation observations obtained by Cassini/UVIS. Vertical profiles of eight chemical species (CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C2H6, C4H2, C6H6, HCN, HC3N) and haze particles are retrieved from these observations using an instrument forward model, which considers the technical issue of pointing motion. The Markov-chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm is used to obtain the posterior probability distributions of parameters in the retrieval, which inherently…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
