A retrospective analysis of mid-infrared observations of the Comet D/Shoemaker-Levy 9 and Wesley impacts on Jupiter
James A. Sinclair, Carey M. Lisse, Glenn S. Orton, Meera, Krishnamoorthy, Leigh N. Fletcher, Joseph Hora, Csaba Palotai and, Thomas Hayward

TL;DR
This study re-analyzed mid-infrared observations of Jupiter's impacts by Comet D/Shoemaker-Levy 9 and the Wesley impactor, revealing differences in atmospheric effects and impact residue composition through consistent methods.
Contribution
It provides a comparative, quantitative analysis of impact residues and atmospheric changes using spectrophotometry and radiative transfer, highlighting compositional differences between the two impacts.
Findings
SL9 impact sites show enhanced stratospheric CH4 and NH3 emissions.
Non-gaseous emission features indicate amorphous olivine and obsidian presence.
Wesley impact had higher NH3 concentrations and lacked silicates, suggesting different impact conditions.
Abstract
We present a retrospective analysis of Earth-based mid-infrared observations of Jupiter capturing the aftermath of the impacts by Comet D/Shoemaker-Levy 9 (henceforth SL9) in July 1994 and the Wesley impactor in July 2009. While the atmospheric effects of both impacts have been reported previously, we were motivated to re-examine both events using consistent methods to enable robust, quantitative comparisons. We analyzed spectrophotometry and spectroscopy capturing both impacts using two independent analyses: 1) a least-squares search over a grid of candidate mineral species to determine the composition of impact residue and 2) a radiative transfer analysis to derive atmospheric information. We observe that the SL9 impact sites are enhanced in stratospheric CH4 emissions at 7.9 um, due to shock heating and adiabatic compression from plume re-entry, and from 8.5 - 11.5 um due to…
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