Pluto's lower atmosphere structure and methane abundance from high-resolution spectroscopy and stellar occultations
Résumé
Context. Pluto possesses a thin atmosphere, primarily composed of nitrogen, in which the detection of methane has been reported. Aims. The goal is to constrain essential but so far unknown parameters of Pluto's atmosphere such as the surface pressure, lower atmosphere thermal stucture, and methane mixing ratio. Methods. We use high-resolution spectroscopic observations of gaseous methane, and a novel analysis of occultation light-curves. Results. We show that (i) Pluto's surface pressure is currently in the 6.5-24 μbar range (ii) the methane mixing ratio is 0.5±0.1 %, adequate to explain Pluto's inverted thermal structure and ∼100 K upper atmosphere temperature (iii) a troposphere is not required by our data, but if present, it has a depth of at most 17 km, i.e. less than one pressure scale height; in this case methane is supersaturated in most of it. The atmospheric and bulk surface abundance of methane are strikingly similar, a possible consequence of the presence of a CH4-rich top surface layer.
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