The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn

We present an H+3 latitudinal profile of Saturn, obtained in 1998 October using the CSHELL spectrometer on the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility. The profile, measured at 3.953 μm, shows that the majority of the emission is concentrated in the auroral ovals, making Saturn similar to Jupiter and diffe...

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Main Authors: Stallard, T, Miller, S, Ballester, GE, Rego, D, Joseph, RD, Trafton, LM
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1501806/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1501806 2023-05-15T18:22:25+02:00 The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn Stallard, T Miller, S Ballester, GE Rego, D Joseph, RD Trafton, LM 1999-08-20 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1501806/ unknown Astrophysical Journal , 521 (2 PART 2) (1999) Article 1999 ftucl 2017-01-12T23:12:37Z We present an H+3 latitudinal profile of Saturn, obtained in 1998 October using the CSHELL spectrometer on the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility. The profile, measured at 3.953 μm, shows that the majority of the emission is concentrated in the auroral ovals, making Saturn similar to Jupiter and different from Uranus. The spatial resolution is sufficient to resolve the southern auroral oval, currently fully displayed around the south pole, into two peaks separated by 1″.2. At the time of the observations reported here, the emission flux in the H+3 line is 8.3 (± 1.7) × 10-18 W m-2 for the intensity integrated over a 1″.0 swath along the southern aurora and 5.8 (± 1.3) × 10-18 W m-2 for the northern aurora. There may also be some mid-to low-latitude emission, similar to that on Jupiter. We suggest that planetwide H+3 emission from Saturn is between 1.2 and 3.6 × 1011 W. Article in Journal/Newspaper South pole University College London: UCL Discovery Jupiter ENVELOPE(101.133,101.133,-66.117,-66.117) South Pole
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
description We present an H+3 latitudinal profile of Saturn, obtained in 1998 October using the CSHELL spectrometer on the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility. The profile, measured at 3.953 μm, shows that the majority of the emission is concentrated in the auroral ovals, making Saturn similar to Jupiter and different from Uranus. The spatial resolution is sufficient to resolve the southern auroral oval, currently fully displayed around the south pole, into two peaks separated by 1″.2. At the time of the observations reported here, the emission flux in the H+3 line is 8.3 (± 1.7) × 10-18 W m-2 for the intensity integrated over a 1″.0 swath along the southern aurora and 5.8 (± 1.3) × 10-18 W m-2 for the northern aurora. There may also be some mid-to low-latitude emission, similar to that on Jupiter. We suggest that planetwide H+3 emission from Saturn is between 1.2 and 3.6 × 1011 W.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Stallard, T
Miller, S
Ballester, GE
Rego, D
Joseph, RD
Trafton, LM
spellingShingle Stallard, T
Miller, S
Ballester, GE
Rego, D
Joseph, RD
Trafton, LM
The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn
author_facet Stallard, T
Miller, S
Ballester, GE
Rego, D
Joseph, RD
Trafton, LM
author_sort Stallard, T
title The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn
title_short The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn
title_full The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn
title_fullStr The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn
title_full_unstemmed The H + 3 latitudinal profile of Saturn
title_sort h + 3 latitudinal profile of saturn
publishDate 1999
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1501806/
long_lat ENVELOPE(101.133,101.133,-66.117,-66.117)
geographic Jupiter
South Pole
geographic_facet Jupiter
South Pole
genre South pole
genre_facet South pole
op_source Astrophysical Journal , 521 (2 PART 2) (1999)
_version_ 1766201836558090240