D. Banfield et al., NEAR-IR SPECTROPHOTOMETRY OF JOVIAN AEROSOLS - MERIDIONAL AND VERTICAL DISTRIBUTIONS, Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962), 134(1), 1998, pp. 11-23
Photometrically calibrated grism spectra of Jupiter in the H (1.45-1.8
mu m) and K (1.95-2.5 mu m) bands with a resolution of about 100 were
taken with the 5-m Hale telescope at Palomar in August of 1995. The s
pectra were obtained as meridional cuts at six different longitudes on
the planet, with one cut crossing the Great Red Spot. The technique o
utlined in D. Banfield et al. (1996, Icarus 121, 389-410) for the retr
ieval of scatterer density with altitude from near-infrared spectra is
used and refined. It is expected that this retrieval technique will f
ind use in the interpretation of many atmospheric near-infrared reflec
tion spectra, especially those from Galileo NIMS and Cassini VIMS. For
the wavelengths and spectral resolution used in this study, the sensi
tivity of the inversions extends from pressure levels near 400 mbar up
to about 20 mbar. Employing this inversion technique on the spectra y
ields well-resolved jovian cloud densities for tau less than or simila
r to 0.1, as a function of latitude and altitude. The density of scatt
erers is minimum at a height where the pressure is about 100 mbar and
increases both upward and downward from this level. The minimum near 1
00 mbar can be explained by coagulation of settling particles, leading
to an increase in fall speed. The results indicate that stratospheric
haze particles are generated at heights where p less than or similar
to 20 mbar. (C) 1998 Academic Press