Astronomers2 using the upgraded Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array in New Mexico have produced the most
detailed3 radio map yet of the atmosphere of Jupiter, revealing the massive movement of ammonia gas that
underlies4 the colorful bands, spots and whirling clouds visible to the naked eye. The University of California, Berkeley researchers measured radio
emissions5 from Jupiter's atmosphere in
wavelength6 bands where clouds are
transparent7. The observers were able to see as deep as 100 kilometers (60 miles) below the cloud tops, a largely unexplored region where clouds form.
The planet's
thermal8 radio emissions are
partially9 absorbed by ammonia gas. Based on the amount of absorption, the researchers could determine how much ammonia is present and at what depth.
By studying these regions of the planet's atmosphere, astronomers hope to learn how global circulation and cloud formation are driven by Jupiter's powerful internal heat source. These studies also will shed light on similar processes occuring on other giant planets in our solar system and on newly discovered giant exoplanets around distant stars.
"We in essence created a three-dimensional picture of ammonia gas in Jupiter's atmosphere, which reveals upward and downward motions within the turbulent atmosphere," said principal author Imke de Pater, a UC Berkeley professor of astronomy.
The map bears a striking resemblance to visible-light images taken by amateur astronomers and the Hubble Space Telescope, she said.
The radio map shows ammonia-rich gases rising into and forming the upper cloud layers: an ammonium hydrosulfide cloud at a temperature near 200 Kelvin (minus 100 degrees Fahrenheit) and an ammonia-ice cloud in the approximately 160 Kelvin cold air (minus 170 degrees Fahrenheit). These clouds are easily seen from Earth by optical telescopes.
Conversely, the radio maps show ammonia-poor air sinking into the planet, similar to how dry air
descends10 from above the cloud layers on Earth.
The map also shows that hotspots -- so-called because they appear bright in radio and thermal
infrared11 images -- are ammonia-poor regions that encircle the planet like a belt just north of the equator. Between these hotspots are ammonia-rich upwellings that bring ammonia from deeper in the planet.
"With radio, we can peer through the clouds and see that those hotspots are interleaved with
plumes12 of ammonia rising from deep in the planet, tracing the
vertical13 undulations of an equatorial wave system," said UC Berkeley research
astronomer1 Michael Wong.