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Abstract The dark colors of Jupiter's North Equatorial Belt (NEB, 7–17°N) appeared to expand northward into the neighboring zone in 2015, consistent with a 3–5 year cycle. Inversions of thermal‐IR imaging from the Very Large Telescope revealed a moderate warming and reduction of aerosol opacity at the cloud tops at 17–20°N, suggesting subsidence and drying in the expanded sector. Two new thermal waves were identified during this period: (i) an upper tropospheric thermal wave (wave number 16–17, amplitude 2.5 K at 170 mbar) in the mid‐NEB that was anticorrelated with haze reflectivity; and (ii) a stratospheric wave (wave number 13–14, amplitude 7.3 K at 5 mbar) at 20–30°N. Both were quasi‐stationary, confined to regions of eastward zonal flow, and are morphologically similar to waves observed during previous expansion events.
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Leigh N. Fletcher
University of Leicester
Glenn S. Orton
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
James Sinclair
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Geophysical Research Letters
University of California, Berkeley
University of Oxford
Goddard Space Flight Center
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Fletcher et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e33405e52bf159f3b73828 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/2017gl073383