Long term variability of Jupiter's northern auroral 8-micron CH4 emissions
James A. Sinclair, Robert West, John M. Barbara, Chihiro Tao, and Glenn S. Orton, Thomas K. Greathouse, Rohini S. Giles, Denis, Grodent, Leigh N. Fletcher, Patrick G. J. Irwin

TL;DR
This study analyzes three decades of Earth-based infrared observations to understand the variability of Jupiter's northern auroral CH4 emissions, finding weak links to solar insolation and solar cycle but moderate correlation with solar wind conditions.
Contribution
It provides the first long-term quantitative analysis of Jupiter's auroral CH4 emission variability and assesses potential solar and magnetospheric influences.
Findings
RPR varies by 37% over multiple timescales.
Weak correlation (r<0.2) with solar insolation rules out solar heating as main driver.
Moderate correlation (r≈0.45-0.51) with solar wind pressure suggests solar wind influence.
Abstract
We present a study of the long term variability of Jupiter's mid-infrared auroral CH4 emissions. 7.7 - 7.9 micron images of Jupiter recorded by Earth-based telescopes over the last three decades were collated in order to quantify the magnitude and timescales over which the northern auroral hotspot's CH4 emissions varies. We find that the ratio of the radiance of the poleward northern auroral emissions to a lower-latitude zonal mean, henceforth 'Relative Poleward Radiance' or RPR, exhibits a 37% variability over a range of timescales. We searched for patterns of variability in order to test whether seasonally-varying solar insolation, the 11-year solar cycle, or short-term solar wind variability at Jupiter's magnetopause could explain the observed evolution. The variability of the RPR exhibits a weak (r < 0.2) correlation with the solar insolation received at Jupiter's high-northern…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
