These infrared images of Jupiter with color added were obtained by the
European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope in 2016 and contributed to
the new study. The colors represent temperatures and cloudiness: The bluer
areas are cold and cloudy, and the orange areas are warmer and cloud-free. Credits:
ESO / L.N. Fletcher
Based partly on data from generations of NASA missions, including NASA’s
Voyager and Cassini, the work could help scientists determine how to predict
weather on Jupiter.
Scientists have completed the longest-ever study tracking temperatures in
Jupiter’s upper troposphere, the layer of the atmosphere where the giant
planet’s weather occurs and where its signature colorful striped clouds form.
The work, conducted over four decades by stitching together data from NASA
spacecraft and ground-based telescope observations, found unexpected patterns
in how temperatures of Jupiter’s belts and zones change over time. The study is
a major step toward a better understanding of what drives weather at our solar
system’s largest planet and eventually being able to forecast it.
Jupiter’s troposphere has a lot in common with Earth’s: It’s where clouds form and
storms churn. To understand this weather activity, scientists need to study
certain properties, including wind, pressure, humidity, and temperature. They
have known since NASA’s Pioneer 10 and 11 missions in the 1970s that, in general, colder temperatures are
associated with Jupiter’s lighter and whiter bands (known as zones), while the
darker brown-red bands (known as belts) are locations of warmer temperatures.
But there weren’t enough data sets to understand how temperatures vary over
the long-term. The new research, published Dec. 19 in Nature Astronomy, breaks ground by studying images of the bright infrared glow (invisible
to the human eye) that rises from warmer regions of the atmosphere, directly
measuring Jupiter’s temperatures above the colorful clouds. The scientists
collected these images at regular intervals over three of Jupiter’s orbits
around the Sun, each of which lasts 12 Earth years.
In the process, they found that Jupiter’s temperatures rise and fall
following definite periods that aren’t tied to the seasons or any other cycles
scientists know about. Because Jupiter has weak seasons – the planet is tilted
on its axis only 3 degrees, compared to Earth’s jaunty 23.5 degrees –
scientists didn’t expect to find temperatures on Jupiter varying in such
regular cycles.
The study also revealed a mysterious connection between temperature shifts
in regions thousands of miles apart: As temperatures went up at specific
latitudes in the northern hemisphere, they went down at the same latitudes in
the southern hemisphere – like a mirror image across the equator.
“That was the most surprising of all,” said Glenn Orton, senior research
scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and lead author of the study. “We
found a connection between how the temperatures varied at very distant
latitudes. It’s similar to a phenomenon we see on Earth, where weather and
climate patterns in one region can have a noticeable influence on weather
elsewhere, with the patterns of variability seemingly ‘teleconnected’ across
vast distances through the atmosphere.”
The next challenge is to find out what causes these cyclical and seemingly
synchronized changes.
“We’ve solved one part of the puzzle now, which is that the atmosphere
shows these natural cycles,” said co-author Leigh Fletcher of the University of
Leicester in England. “To understand what’s driving these patterns and why they
occur on these particular timescales, we need to explore both above and below
the cloudy layers.”
One possible explanation became apparent at the equator: The study authors
found that temperature variations higher up, in the stratosphere, seemed to
rise and fall in a pattern that is the opposite of how temperatures behave in
the troposphere, suggesting changes in the stratosphere influence changes in
the troposphere and vice versa.
Decades of Observations
Orton and his colleagues began the study in 1978. For the duration of their
research, they would write proposals several times a year to win observation
time on three large telescopes around the world: the Very Large Telescope in
Chile as well as NASA’s Infrared Telescope
Facility and the Subaru Telescope at the Maunakea
Observatories in Hawaii.
During the first two decades of the study, Orton and his teammates took
turns traveling to those observatories, gathering the information on
temperatures that would eventually allow them to connect the dots. (By the
early 2000s, some of the telescope work could be done remotely.)
Then came the hard part – combining multiple years’ worth of observations
from several telescopes and science instruments to search for patterns. Joining
these veteran scientists on their long-duration study were several
undergraduate interns, none of whom had been born when the study began. They
are students at Caltech in Pasadena, California; Cal Poly Pomona in Pomona,
California; Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio; and Wellesley College in
Wellesley, Massachusetts.
Scientists hope the study will help them eventually be able to predict
weather on Jupiter, now that they have a more detailed understanding of it. The
research could contribute to climate modeling, with computer simulations of the
temperature cycles and how they affect weather – not just for Jupiter, but for
all giant planets across our solar system and beyond.
“Measuring these temperature changes and periods over time is a step toward ultimately having a full-on Jupiter weather forecast, if we can connect cause and effect in Jupiter’s atmosphere,” Fletcher said. “And the even bigger-picture question is if we can someday extend this to other giant planets to see if similar patterns show up.”
Source: 40-Year
Study Finds Mysterious Patterns in Temperatures at Jupiter | NASA
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