Multi-instrument sounding of a Jovian thunderstorm from Juno
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-15-2025
Department
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Abstract
Thunderstorms play a significant role in transporting heat from the deep interior to space on giant planets. We present observations of a 3,400-km wide thunderstorm complex in Jupiter's North Equatorial Belt (NEB) during the 38th periapse of the Juno spacecraft on 29 Nov. 2021. Data were acquired by the Microwave Radiometer (MWR), the visible light JunoCam instrument, the Jovian InfraRed Auroral Mapper (JIRAM), and from supporting Earth-based imaging. This was the first time Juno was able to observe a thunderstorm at suitably low emission angles with multiple instruments at close range (∼5,690 km), making it the most comprehensive close-up assessment of a Jovian thunderstorm to date. Lightning detection confirmed the Storm's vigorous convective nature. MWR brightness temperatures indicate this Storm appears to be wholly contained within the weather layer, i.e., no deeper than the expected base of the H2O cloud, and not as a result of any detected deep-seated upwelling beneath the H2O cloud base. Earth-based observations tracked it over its ∼ 2-week lifespan, providing evidence that mesoscale-to-synoptic-scale forcing mechanisms were involved in sustaining it, including the intriguing possibility of a humidity front (‘dryline’), a sharp gradient in the vapor abundance, promoting lift along a concentrated region.
Publication Title
Icarus
Recommended Citation
Brueshaber, S.,
Zhang, Z.,
Rogers, J.,
Eichstädt, G.,
Orton, G.,
Grassi, D.,
Fletcher, L.,
Li, C.,
Mizumoto, S.,
Mura, A.,
Oyafuso, F.,
Sankar, R.,
Wong, M.,
Hansen, C.,
Levin, S.,
&
Bolton, S.
(2025).
Multi-instrument sounding of a Jovian thunderstorm from Juno.
Icarus,
432.
http://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2025.116465
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p2/1429