AAS 195th Meeting, January 2000
Session 63. First Year's Results from the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite
Special Session Oral, Thursday, January 13, 2000, 2:00-3:30pm, Centennial III

[Previous] | [Session 63] | [Next]


[63.06] Solar System Observations: Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, and Comet C/1999 H1 (Lee)

M.A. Gurwell (CfA), E. Lellouch (Obs. Meudon), D.A. Neufeld (JHU), G.J. Melnick, J.R. Stauffer, M.L.N. Ashby, E.A. Bergin, S.C. Kleiner, B.M. Patten, R. Plume, V. Tolls, Z. Wang, Y.F. Zhang (CfA), P.F. Goldsmith (Cornell U., NAIC), M. Harwit (Cornell U.), N.R. Erickson, J.E. Howe, R.L. Snell (UMass, Amherst), D.G. Koch (NASA ARC), R. Schieder, G. Winnewisser (U. Köln), G. Chin (NASA GSFC)

The Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite has obtained continuum and spectral line observations of several solar system objects during its first year of operation. The high spectral resolution provided by SWAS allows the pressure-broadened shape of molecular rotational lines to be accurately measured, which can be used to determine the global mean vertical structure of temperature and/or molecular abundance.

Mars: Observations of Mars were obtained over several days near opposition in late April 1999. We report the detection of 13CO(5-4) and the ortho ground state H2O (110--101). The CO isotope has been used to constrain the vertical temperature profile, which is in excellent agreement with measurements made both with ground-based millimeter spectroscopy and Mars Global Surveyor. The water lineshape indicates that saturation vapor pressure dominates its distribution above ~8 km.

Jupiter and Saturn: We report that SWAS has detected ortho ground state H2O (110--101) emission from the upper atmospheres of both Jupiter and Saturn, confirming initial detections made with ISO. Our preliminary estimates find that the water must reside at or above about 5 millibar, well into the stratosphere. This suggests that the observed water is the product of ablation of icy grains bombarding the upper atmosphere.

Comet C/1999 H1 (Lee): SWAS was used to detect the ground state H2O (110--101) emission from Comet Lee as it was approaching the sun (R~1.2 AU). We estimate that the water production rate at the time was 1.0\times 1029 s-1. Over the 4.7 day period of observation, the water production rate showed no significant variation.

The SWAS team gratefully acknowledges NASA contract NAS5-30702.


If you would like more information about this abstract, please follow the link to http://oir-www.harvard.edu/cfa/oir/Research/swas.html. This link was provided by the author. When you follow it, you will leave the Web site for this meeting; to return, you should use the Back comand on your browser. [Previous] | [Session 63] | [Next]