ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Tidal Currents Detected in Kraken Mare Straits from Cassini VIMS Sun Glitter Observations

103   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Michael Heslar
 تاريخ النشر 2020
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We present Cassini VIMS observations of sun glitter -- wave-induced reflections from a liquid surface offset from a specular point -- on Kraken Mare. Sun glitter reveals rough sea surfaces around Kraken Mare, namely the coasts and narrow straits. The sun glitter observations indicate wave activity driven by the winds and tidal currents in Kraken Mare during northern summer. T104 Cassini VIMS observations show three sun glitter features in Bayta Fretum indicative of variegated wave fields. We cannot uniquely determine one source for the coastal Bayta waves, but we lean toward the interpretation of surface winds, because tidal currents should be too weak to generate capillary-gravity waves in Bayta Fretum. T105 and T110 observations reveal wave fields in the straits of Seldon Fretum, Lulworth Sinus, and Tunu Sinus that likely originate from the constriction of tidal currents. Coastlines of Bermoothes and Hufaidh Insulae adjoin rough sea surfaces, suggesting a complex interplay of wind-roughened seas and localized tidal currents. Bermoothes and Hufaidh Insulae may share characteristics of either the Torres Strait off Australia or the Aland region of Finland, summarized as an island-dense strait with shallow bathymetry that hosts complex surface circulation patterns. Hufaidh Insulae could host seafloor bedforms formed by tidal currents with an abundant sediment supply, similar to the Torres Strait. The coastlines of Hufaidh and Bermoothes Insulae likely host ria or flooded coastal inlets, suggesting the Insulae may be local peaks of primordial crust isolated by an episode of sea-level rise or tectonic uplift.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

142 - S. Rodriguez 2009
Titan is one of the primary scientific objectives of the NASA ESA ASI Cassini Huygens mission. Scattering by haze particles in Titans atmosphere and numerous methane absorptions dramatically veil Titans surface in the visible range, though it can be studied more easily in some narrow infrared windows. The Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) instrument onboard the Cassini spacecraft successfully imaged its surface in the atmospheric windows, taking hyperspectral images in the range 0.4 5.2 ?m. On 26 October (TA flyby) and 13 December 2004 (TB flyby), the Cassini Huygens mission flew over Titan at an altitude lower than 1200 km at closest approach. We report here on the analysis of VIMS images of the Huygens landing site acquired at TA and TB, with a spatial resolution ranging from 16 to14.4 km/pixel. The pure atmospheric backscattering component is corrected by using both an empirical method and a first-order theoretical model. Both approaches provide consistent results. After the removal of scattering, ratio images reveal subtle surface heterogeneities. A particularly contrasted structure appears in ratio images involving the 1.59 and 2.03 ?m images north of the Huygens landing site. Although pure water ice cannot be the only component exposed at Titans surface, this area is consistent with a local enrichment in exposed water ice and seems to be consistent with DISR/Huygens images and spectra interpretations. The images show also a morphological structure that can be interpreted as a 150 km diameter impact crater with a central peak.
The Cassini flyby of Jupiter in 2000 provided spatially resolved spectra of Jupiters atmosphere using the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS). These spectra contain a strong absorption at wavelengths from about 2.9 $mu$m to 3.1 $mu$m, pre viously noticed in a 3-$mu$m spectrum obtained by the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) in 1996. While Brooke et al. (1998, Icarus 136, 1-13) were able to fit the ISO spectrum very well using ammonia ice as the sole source of particulate absorption, Sromovsky and Fry (2010, Icarus 210, 211-229), using significantly revised NH$_3$ gas absorption models, showed that ammonium hydrosulfide (NH$_4$SH) provided a better fit to the ISO spectrum than NH$_3$ , but that the best fit was obtained when both NH$_3$ and NH$_4$SH were present. Although the large FOV of the ISO instrument precluded identification of the spatial distribution of these two components, the VIMS spectra at low and intermediate phase angles show that 3-$mu$m absorption is present in zones and belts, in every region investigated, and both low- and high-opacity samples are best fit with a combination of NH$_4$SH and NH$_3$ particles at all locations. The best fits are obtained with a layer of small ammonia-coated particles ($rsim0.3$ $mu$m) overlying but often close to an optically thicker but still modest layer of much larger NH$_4$SH particles ($rsim 10$ $mu$m), with a deeper optically thicker layer, which might also be composed of NH$_4$SH. Although these fits put NH$_3$ ice at pressures less than 500 mb, this is not inconsistent with the lack of prominent NH$_3$ features in Jupiters longwave spectrum because the reflectivity of the core particles strongly suppresses the NH$_3$ absorption features, at both near-IR and thermal wavelengths.
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 Saturns 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 layers changed very little, except for the ammonia ice layer, which decreased from about 1 bar to 0.4 bar near the edge of the eye, but increased to 1 bar inside the eye. Inside the hexagon there were large increases in optical depth, by up to a factor of 10 near the eye for the putative diphosphine layer and by a factor of four over most of the hexagon interior. Inside the eye, aerosol optical depths were very low, suggesting downwelling motions. The high contrast between eye and surroundings in 2016 was due to substantial increases in optical depths outside the eye. The color change from blue/green to gold inside most of the hexagon region can be explained in our model almost entirely by changes in the stratospheric haze, which increased between 2013 and 2016 by a factor of four in optical depth and by almost a factor of three in the short-wavelength peak imaginary index.
The spectral position of the 3.6 micron continuum peak measured on Cassini-VIMS I/F spectra is used as a marker to infer the temperature of the regolith particles covering the surfaces of Saturns icy satellites. This feature is characterizing the cry stalline water ice spectrum which is the dominant compositional endmember of the satellites surfaces. Laboratory measurements indicate that the position of the 3.6 micron peak of pure water ice is temperature-dependent, shifting towards shorter wavelengths when the sample is cooled, from about 3.65 micron at T=123 K to about 3.55 micron at T=88 K. A similar method was already applied to VIMS Saturns rings mosaics to retrieve ring particles temperature (Filacchione et al., 2014). We report here about the daytime temperature variations observed on the icy satellites as derived from three different VIMS observation types. Temperature maps are built by mining the complete VIMS dataset collected in years 2004-2009 (pre-equinox) and in 2009-2012 (post equinox) by selecting pixels with max 150 km/pixel resolution. VIMS-derived temperature maps allow to identify thermal anomalies across the equatorial lens of Mimas and Tethys.
We used 0.85 - 5.1 micron 2006 observations by Cassinis Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) to constrain the unusual vertical structure and compositions of cloud layers in Saturns south polar region, the site of a powerful vortex circulat ion, shadow-casting cloud bands, and spectral evidence of ammonia ice clouds without the lightning usually associated with such features. We modeled spectral observations with a 4-layer model that includes (1) a stratospheric haze, (2) a top tropospheric layer of non-absorbing (possibly diphosphine) particles near 300 mbar, with a fraction of an optical depth (much less than found elsewhere on Saturn), (3) a moderately thicker layer (1 - 2 optical depths) of ammonia ice particles near 900 mbar, and (4) extending from 5 bars up to 2-4 bars, an assumed optically thick layer where NH4SH and H20 are likely condensables. What makes the 3-micron absorption of ammonia ice unexpectedly apparent in these polar clouds, is not penetrating convection, but instead the relatively low optical depth of the top tropospheric cloud layer, perhaps because of polar downwelling and/or lower photochemical production rates. We did not find any evidence for optically thick eyewalls that were previously thought to be responsible for the observed shadows. Instead, we found evidence for small step-wise decreases in optical depth of the stratospheric haze near 87.9 deg S and in the putative diphosphine layer near 88.9 deg S, which are the likely causes of shadows and bright features we call antishadows. We found changes as a function of latitude in the phosphine vertical profile and in the arsine mixing ratio that support the existence of downwelling within 2 deg of the pole.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا