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Published December 20, 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Strong Resemblance between Surface and Deep Zonal Winds inside Jupiter Revealed by High-degree Gravity Moments

Abstract

Jupiter's atmosphere interior is a coupled fluid dynamical system strongly influenced by the rapid background rotation. While the visible atmosphere features east–west zonal winds on the order of ∼100 m s−1, zonal flows in the dynamo region are significantly slower, on the order of ∼cm s−1 or less, according to the latest magnetic secular variation analysis. The vertical profile of the zonal flows and the underlying mechanism remain elusive. The latest Juno radio tracking measurements afforded the derivation of Jupiter's gravity field to spherical harmonic degree 40. Here, we use the latest gravity solution to reconstruct Jupiter's deep zonal winds without a priori assumptions about their latitudinal profile. The pattern of our reconstructed deep zonal winds strongly resemble that of the surface wind within ±35° latitude from the equator, in particular the northern off-equatorial jet (NOEJ) and the southern off-equatorial jet. The reconstruction features larger uncertainties in the southern hemisphere due to the north–south asymmetric nature of Juno's trajectory. The amplitude of the reconstructed deep NOEJ matches that of the surface wind when the wind is truncated at a depth ∼2500 km, and becomes twice that of the surface wind if the truncation depth is reduced to ∼1500 km. Our analysis supports the physical picture in which a prominent part of the surface zonal winds extends into Jupiter's interior significantly deeper than the water cloud layer.

Copyright and License

© 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

Acknowledgement

All authors acknowledge support from the NASA Juno project. Part of this research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. H.C. would like to thank the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Cambridge, for support and hospitality during the program Frontiers in dynamo theory: from the Earth to the stars where some work on this paper was undertaken. This work was supported by EPSRC grant No. EP/R014604/1. In addition, this work was partially supported by a grant from the Simons Foundation.

Contributions

H.C. conceptualized the study, carried out the reconstruction of deep winds from gravity harmonics, and drafted the manuscript. J.B., R.K.Y., and L.K. supported the analysis and interpretation of the results. R.S.P. derived the gravity harmonics of Jupiter and their uncertainties from the Juno Radio Tracking experiments. B.M. provided the gravity harmonics associated with the solid-body rotating Jupiter. All authors contributed to the discussion, as well as editing and revising the manuscript. D.J.S. leads the Interior Working Group of Juno, and S.J.B. is the principal investigator of the Juno Mission.

Data Availability

All the Juno radio tracking data used to derive the gravity moments and their uncertainties in this study are available from the NASA Planetary Data System (Buccino et al. 2020https://pds.nasa.gov).

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Additional details

Created:
January 11, 2024
Modified:
January 11, 2024